004 DIAMOND TERRACE

PEAK DISTRICT / RESIDENTIAL / 2021

A small extension to an existing end of terrace property on the edge of the Peak District. The project seeks to improve the connection from the main living space to the garden, where the family spends most of their time. The proposal adds a series of small interventions to keep costs affordable but maximise the impact upon the lives of the owners.

003 GLENARM ROAD

LONDON / RESIDENTIAL / 2021

The project seeks to renovate and extend a dilapidated, uninhabitable victorian terrace. The scheme establishes a single storey L-shaped extension. The volume infills the narrow passage to the side of the rear outrigger. A large skylight brings light into the centre of the house.

The property is unique in that its bay window was poorly replaced in the 1980’s - giving us the opportunity to create a new modern bay window along the existing streetscape using the recycled bricks from the adapted ground floor.

The project starts on site in May 2021.

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002 ELM BANK GARDENS

LONDON / RESIDENTIAL / 2021

A collaboration with Reed Watts Architects. The scheme provides a new link between two key living spaces whilst renovating the existing extension to improve the circulation, light quality and connection to the garden. The project drew upon the mid-century idea of seamlessly connecting indoor and outdoor spaces. The minimal, monochrome material palette connects the internal and external through white washed walls with lime mortar slurry and the roof references the existing slate roof of the property, using UK quarried slate in a small tile size creating a more delicate appearance.

001 GHOST CHAPEL

GALWAY / INSTALLATION / 2017

The Ghost Chapel emerged from the study of a 6th-century chapel on the island of St MacDara, Connemara, Ireland. St MacDara’s Chapel is the host to an annual mass pilgrimage, however, due to adverse weather conditions, the mass is often held on the mainland from a luton van. The Ghost Chapel will host the mass for the community on these occasions and simultaneously act as a marker along the coast of Connemara. The design removes the stones of the original chapel leaving behind the filigree mortar joints. The project began as a collaborative student project at The Bartlett, UCL in 2016. It was exhibited at the Galway International Festival of the Arts in 2018 and will be part of the Galway 2020 celebrations.

Collaborators: Malina Dabrowska, Henry Svendsen, Vasilis Marcou Ilchuk, Christie Kwan Yeung, Oscar Plastow and Carl Inder

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