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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Barnham Road in London, England by MOCT Studio

 
July 16th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: MOCT Studio

East London-based MOCT Studio have re-planned and extended a suburban London semi-detached to provide a faceted roof social space for a large family.

The family of six had become increasingly cramped in the existing semi-detached, despite the previous addition of two small dormers, with shared children’s bedrooms, a single bathroom and fragmented living spaces that meant the family were rarely all in the same room.

The roof tapers down towards the garden to frame and connect to the new patio, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

  • Architects: MOCT Studio
  • Project: Barnham Road
  • Location: 17 Barnham Road, London, England
  • Photography: Ioana Marinescu
  • Client: Christopher and Zena Ross
  • Area: 140 Sq.m
  • Completed: 2016

Eclectic mix of roof additions in the neighbourhood that present a hectic roofscape, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

The owners wanted a bathroom and separate bedrooms for their children and a single open social space to gather. As a detour from the typical horizontal separation of living and private spaces, the axis of the stair was used as an additional division in the house allowing the children to occupy the entire first floor and the parents the converted front ground floor rooms.

Interior view of light cast by roof lights, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

Secret doors in unbroken panelling, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

MOCT Studio pooled the living spaces into a new side and rear extension under a faceted zinc roof to create daily social space for family and friends. The full width of the property was used to create a single 42-square-meter central living space as a heart for the house. A number of secondary spaces then surround and connect into the large central space.

Hidden doors allow unbroken paneling across the rooms, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

Panel wrapped entrance vestibule, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

One of the owners is a cinematographer and needed a space to work and review footage at home. The deep plan area at ground floor under the existing house where natural daylight was difficult to provide is usurped for this purpose. The room is provided with specifically controlled lighting and can be connected or disconnected from family life in the central space by telescoping birch timber panels.

Interior view from living room through to patio, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

The internal datum extends to the exterior in basket weave brick work, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

The entrance of the house and the approach to the central living space were designed to provide an element of play and sense of arrival. A small internal balcony was introduced to overlook the entrance vestibule allowing the children to gather, greet or surprise visitors. Leading from the entrance the central space is entered along a corridor before descending a few steps and revealing the faceted ceiling.

The inspiration for the faceted multi-pitch roof came from the visibly eclectic mix of roof additions in the neighbourhood that present a hectic roofscape of varying pitches, ridges, hips and projections.

Triangular roof lights set against faceted ceiling, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

Interior view from entrance lobby through to garden, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

The standing seam zinc roof was set out from a series of height constrains along the property boundary with the neighbours and against the existing house. The facets are then made of varying pitches up towards a central high point. Two triangle roof lights are positioned and oriented to enhancing the dynamic volume and cast dramatic forms of natural light deep into the plan. The roof tapers down towards the garden to frame and connect to the new patio and garden beyond where the children play.

External view of zinc roof and triangular roof lights, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

Black cement tiles and corian vanity top in the bathrooms, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

Birch timber panelling and joinery is used throughout the house to wrap the spaces and unifying the existing and new parts of the house. The paneling acts to provide a warm yet robust environment set at the scale of a child. In the central space the paneling becomes a datum against which to experience the faceted planes of the ceiling. Hidden doors from the central space into utility and storage rooms are designed to allow un-broken paneling across the rooms. The design continues the horizontal datum from the internal to the external elevation in basket weave brickwork.

A variation on the basket weave pattern is used in the teak oiled oak parquet floor throughout the house. Concrete tiles with a triangular motif are then used in the bathrooms reflecting the themes from the heart of the house.

MOCT model photo, Image Courtesy © Ioana Marinescu

MOCT model light study, Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

MOCT drawing study, Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

Image Courtesy © MOCT Studio

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Categories: House, Residential




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