House Made by Many Hands

2021 - 2023

Renovated and Extended Home in Victoria Park Village

This home demonstrates how a Victorian house can be transformed with substantially reduced environmental impact. Minimising use of steel, concrete and internal linings achieved a Lifetime Carbon figure 40% lower than if it had been built conventionally. The design was driven by a strategy of working with what was there, the carbon content of necessary new materials, their buildability and cost.

A spacious kitchen for the chef client is the renovation’s heart, with new sightlines and increased daylight. Spaces are defined through considered placement of structural piers and changes in floor level. Glass doors connect the home office to a roof terrace. Timber structure was employed in place of conventional steelwork throughout, fully demountable at the end of life.

Adopting a thoughtful fabric first approach, identifying the essential, retaining and repurposing usable elements, constructing cautiously, and interweaving old and new, were fundamental principles. Interventions were simple and low-tech.

Where new materials were necessary, they are bio-based: hempcrete, cork, woodfibre, woodwool, and lime plaster. The client actively participated, helping to hand cast the exposed hempcrete walls. Fittings and furnishings, such as the timber floor reclaimed from Bow Magistrates Court, Mediterranean ceiling fans and refurbished lights, imbue the house with character.

The project is the UK’s first building structure to specify limestone calcined clay cement (LC3) concrete, a product which has the capacity to reduce global CO2 emissions by 1-2% if adopted universally. Using this new technology did not distract from the responsibility of making a unique home for the client, one that they enjoy as "lighter, roomier, more functional and more beautiful, whilst remaining true to our values.”

Photography by James Retief and David Grandorge

Publication Links:
Evening Standard: The Renovation That Didn't Cost The Earth

House Made by Many Hands

2021 - 2023

Renovated and Extended Home in Victoria Park Village

This home demonstrates how a Victorian house can be transformed with substantially reduced environmental impact. Minimising use of steel, concrete and internal linings achieved a Lifetime Carbon figure 40% lower than if it had been built conventionally. The design was driven by a strategy of working with what was there, the carbon content of necessary new materials, their buildability and cost.

A spacious kitchen for the chef client is the renovation’s heart, with new sightlines and increased daylight. Spaces are defined through considered placement of structural piers and changes in floor level. Glass doors connect the home office to a roof terrace. Timber structure was employed in place of conventional steelwork throughout, fully demountable at the end of life.

Adopting a thoughtful fabric first approach, identifying the essential, retaining and repurposing usable elements, constructing cautiously, and interweaving old and new, were fundamental principles. Interventions were simple and low-tech.

Where new materials were necessary, they are bio-based: hempcrete, cork, woodfibre, woodwool, and lime plaster. The client actively participated, helping to hand cast the exposed hempcrete walls. Fittings and furnishings, such as the timber floor reclaimed from Bow Magistrates Court, Mediterranean ceiling fans and refurbished lights, imbue the house with character.

The project is the UK’s first building structure to specify limestone calcined clay cement (LC3) concrete, a product which has the capacity to reduce global CO2 emissions by 1-2% if adopted universally. Using this new technology did not distract from the responsibility of making a unique home for the client, one that they enjoy as "lighter, roomier, more functional and more beautiful, whilst remaining true to our values.”

Photography by James Retief and David Grandorge

Publication Links:
Evening Standard: The Renovation That Didn't Cost The Earth