Muswell Hill House
The project was to restore and reconstruct a three storey Edwardian House in the Muswell Hill Conservation Area.
The ambition was to create a contemporary interior using traditional construction and carpentry skills that the Edwardians themselves would hopefully recognise. Taking over two years, the guiding principle at each stage was to have a single spirit carry across the whole house, rather than old feel in contrast to new.
Despite many areas giving the appearance of being simply restored, every space was remodelled from scratch. The house had not been renovated in over one hundred years and was in considerable state of dilapidation. The entire interior was stripped back to brick walls, timber floor joists and studs. Clues and reusable material from the existing house were then taken as the starting point for the design of each floor, on a room by room basis.
The project features new solid bespoke oak joinery, three new bathrooms with stone floors and a rear extension for the kitchen with rebuilt study above. The design was based on an appreciation of Edwardian domestic architecture.
The ground floor has a nobler treatment and bolder colour scheme. Rooms are characterised by fibrous plaster covings, high ceilings and large bifold doors connecting drawing and living rooms.
As you rise towards more private areas of the house, the colours become calmer and at the same time, the design more playful. In a nod to Edwardian architecture and its embrace of fantasy, we opened the attic levels to expose the concealed roof truss work. This creates a variety of surprising volumes and gives the top floors a sense of an overall roof folding down over and enclosing the rooms. These new attic spaces provide both separate play and/or retreat rooms for both children and adults and the chance to glimpse long and surprising views between rooms.
The external scope included replacement of all existing windows with new in matching timber profiles. There are both new and refurbished stained-glass windows, full repair and repointing of the brick facades, new slate roofing, new skylights giving views as far as the City of London and new hard landscaping to front and rear.