Refurbishment and Restore Issue 14 2019 | Page 36

1A Earl's Court Square Our goal was to create an urban house that was comfortable but sustainable; and that looked and felt, in every sense, healthy. The challenge was to do so on a site of just 75m², in central London, in a conservation area, where we were limited by planning constraints to two storeys: one above ground, one below. The design aims to maximise not only the actual space, internally, but also the perception of space. Basement floor plan We have thus built right up to the boundaries - something that entailed both delicate party wall negotiations and a 36 - www.refurbandrestore.co.uk careful choice of construction methods - and given the house generous ceilings. On the ground floor, the ceiling is 3m high but 3.6m beneath the glazed up-and-over extensions which serve to decompose the perceived edges of the living area. In addition, the house is visually open to the natural world outside, with abundant natural light and air and carefully framed views of the surrounding canopy of trees. Construction methods were chosen, too, with a view to limiting costs, as was non- standard procurement on the European model. Construction in London, especially underground, is expensive.