7 Things to Consider when Building a New Area at Home
Choosing to build a new area at your home has become more famous than ever! It’s an ideal way to obtain additional space without worrying about relocation.
Choosing to build a new area at your home has become more famous than ever! It’s an ideal way to obtain additional space without worrying about relocation.
We all wish for a home that would not only serve our needs and preferences but would also provide a unique living experience from the get-go. For this young family, a couple in their 40s’ and their three children, the wish became a reality.
Our brief was to extend and restore a Victorian semi-detached house that had fallen into disrepair in South Cambridge. Our clients also wanted to add a new-build outdoor leisure space to the end of their garden to house a gym, sauna and spa area.
THISS revamped the home of local jewellery designer William Cheshire in London’s Broadway Market. A Victorian attic flat, with 70s add-ons, above a nail salon on the bustling Mare Street in Hackney
TR Studio proposed a concept that included an extension and full refurbishment turning the terraced property into a two-bedroom ground floor apartment with private garden access and a garden studio
The family of four, a husband and wife working in the publishing field, and their two daughters, lived in the house for ten years before deciding to do an extension to expand their kitchen and to create bigger rooms for their two daughters.
The Vitrine project—a house for a classical music composer and an opera director—encompasses a three-sided glass extension to a Victorian terrace house in north London.
Shoehorned into the back of a beautiful Edwardian terraced property, the existing studio was entirely unloved and underwhelming. Every inch of wall was stained orange by cigarette smoke, the single glazing was falling out of its rotten frames and the whole place was uninsulated.