Project: Brackenbury House
Architects: Neil Dusheiko Architects
Location: Hamersmith, London, UK
Area: 1,937 sq ft
Photographs by: Courtesy of Neil Dusheiko Architects
Neil Dusheiko Architects have undertaken a drastic overhaul of an already existing two-story Victorian brick house in west London, Hammersmith to be exact.
The Brackenbury House has undergone a radical remodel which has turned it into a beautiful living space for a young family. It’s interior has a bright, modern look while the compact patio provides a breath of fresh air. Additionally, a new basement has been constructed with a home cinema, a playroom and a guest bedroom.
This project is a radical remodelling of a house in a Conservation area for a young family. The design adds a new basement and a rear extension, which provides expanded living and kitchen space, sky lit sun-filled bathrooms, a home cinema, playroom and guest bedroom. We sought to create an innovative design – rethinking the basement typology in a contemporary way.
The ambitions for the project were high in terms of achieving open plan, visually connected spaces to allow for a greater sense of communication between the different rooms. The key strategy was also the connection to nature through views and natural light.
The conceptual approach was to create a calm atmospheric interior using carved out spaces that allow the pared down use of materials to have a monolithic feel.
The new basement area is lit by large skylights cut into the floors above. All levels are opened out to allow the existing rooms of the Victorian house to give way to an open plan interior on the ground floor and tall loft like spaces upstairs. The kitchen and living rooms open out to a south-west facing patio, creating a strong connection of house and garden.
The new extension to the rear links into the old brickwork through a curved wall suspended above the ground above a completely glazed set of folding doors. The bathrooms are top lit by generous skylights linking bathing spaces to the sky above. The existing ceilings were removed upstairs creating tall vertical spaces with curved ceilings.
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