This Refreshed London Victorian Takes The Millennial Aesthetic to the Max
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Project Details:
Location: London, England
Architect: Neiheiser Argyros / @neiheiser_argyros
Footprint: 2,690 square feet
Builder: Optimal Build LTD
Structural Engineer: Constant Structural Design
Landscape Design: Joanne Bernstein
Photographer: Lorenzo Zandri / @lorenzozandri
From the Architect: "The Steele’s Road House renovates and extends a Victorian-era terrace house in West London, opening the floor plan, bringing in more natural light, and connecting the interior with a large rear garden. The main objectives of the project were to connect the house with the garden and to visually ‘expand’ the interior space of the house without necessarily adding more area.
"The design can be understood as a series of small spatial modifications that accumulate to make a significantly bigger and brighter home. Interior walls are removed and new structural bracing introduced, allowing for the living spaces to be significantly enlarged with continuous views from the front to back of the house. The shared living spaces of the house are arranged on the raised ground floor with the private bedrooms located on the lower ground floor where side extensions and localized structural underpinning enlarge the footprint of the house and maximize its functionality for a growing young family.
"New exterior patios are created on each level, forming a new ground that visually and physically extends the interiors outside, terracing up and down to connect with the garden. The existing backyard ground was excavated and terraced so that the lower level bedrooms can directly access a newly planted garden. In a similar strategy, a small existing balcony is transformed into a generous terrace that also connects the upper level more seamlessly with the garden. Clay pavers on the ground and a deep red railing reinforce the physical and visual continuity between upper terrace, garden and lower patio.
"The lower ground extension is expressed in stained accoya wood cladding, defining a clear contemporary break from the Victorian detailing above. Generous new skylights are strategically placed to filter light deep into the floor plan. A green roof on the new rear terrace visually connects the garden and the life of the house on the upper ground level as well.
"The interior was a process of editing: strategically removing walls, cutting new openings, stripping off layers of plaster and paint, and having a light touch with the choice of new materials to allow the space to breathe and feel more open. Some original features of the house such as the fireplaces and ceiling moldings were retained and renovated. In other locations the original plaster walls are stripped away to reveal and express the underlying brick masonry. New steel and glass doors and windows complement the existing domestic features with an industrial aesthetic. There was an overall approach to materiality that celebrates the elemental and the tactile—with materials like solid wide plank Douglas fir floors, Carrara marble on the kitchen countertops, and pink terrazzo in the hallway and new staircase.
"Color has been used sparingly and deliberately to bring attention to specific features, emphasize continuity, and mark thresholds. Because the overall material palette is neutral, elemental, and raw, the colorful elements become more powerful. A pink balustrade and pink door frames define the entry space, dark blue cabinets contrast with the lightness of the Carrara marble and Douglas fir flooring in the kitchen, while in the garden the red railing reinforces the continuity between the two patios and echoes the red of the native crab apple trees. In the entry to the primary bedroom, dark blue walls and joinery create a transitional dark space that emphasizes the brightness of the bedroom beyond."
Published
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