Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Windows, Shelving, FacadeLens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Sink, Countertop, WindowsLens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Chair, Windows, Countertop, HandrailLens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Facade, Chair, PatioLens House / Alison Brooks Architects - More Images+ 16

  • Conservation Consultant: Hutton & Rostron
  • M&E Consultant: RHB Partnership LLP
  • Client: Private Family
  • Size: 400 sqm (House), 70 sqm (Extension)
  • Cost: £700,000
  • Design Team: Alison Brooks, Alex Warnock-Smith, Rob Liedgens, JamesTaylor
  • City: London
  • Country: United Kingdom
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Alison Brooks Architects has extended a nineteenth century house in north London with two tapered volumes that project into the garden. The first volume wraps around the brick walls at the side and rear of the house to create a home office, while the second volume extends out at the back to increase the size of the first floor living room. The extensions are part of an overall transformation of a classic Victorian semi-detached villa for a client involved in photography and design.

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Windows, Shelving, Facade
© Paul Riddle

The extension was designed as a series of large apertures framed and connected by large trapezoidal planes. These openings capture light throughout the day, draw the garden into the house, and frame precise views of a spectacular walnut tree.

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Countertop, Chair
© Paul Riddle

Each plane of the scheme is either fully glazed or fully solid, there are no punched windows. This approach creates an architecture without mass and weight. It is more like the folded surfaces of origami. Where the side and rear projections converge, seven surfaces come together at one point.

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Chair, Windows
© Paul Riddle

To achieve the low profile of the ten-sided trapezoidal office extension, ABA lowered the existing basement and excavated a new sunken courtyard to form a street-facing office entrance. This new lower ground floor level connects workspace and house. On the garden side, the building rests lightly on the ground with undercut walls to avoid the walnut tree’s roots. Inside, the rooflight geometry funnels light into the workspace throughout the day. A roof terrace cuts into one of the roof, generating a light reflecting plane and heightening the sense of suspended surfaces.

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Table, Sink, Countertop, Windows
© Paul Riddle

The living room’s projecting bay window focusses on the walnut tree like a picture frame.  It also pulls light from above into the living room through a segment of its roof. Beneath the bay window a new wall of glass slides open to link the dining room with a small patio outside. From here a concealed door creates a second entrance to the office.

Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects - Windows

Where the original living room once was, ABA has opened a new double height volume. This space draws south light deep into the house, and like a ‘great hall’, creates a powerful visual connection between the original upper ground floor entrance hall and kitchen/dining space. The folded geometries of the extensions continue into the house to become surfaces punctuated by steel fireplaces, a cantilevered kitchen and other ‘inhabited walls’; a variety of framed settings for modern family life. 

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About this office
Cite: "Lens House / Alison Brooks Architects" 04 Nov 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/289288/lens-house-alison-brooks-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

© Paul Riddle

Lens 住宅 / Alison Brooks Architects

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