Leyton House’s façade is punctuated by a sculptural chimney
The client, filmmaker and writer Max Barron, wanted a home that he could live and work in, and which could easily be altered in the future. ‘I’d always dreamed of building my own house, an obsession inherited from my dad. But I never thought I’d get the chance, still less in London,’ he says. The brief for the three-level home was to optimise the potential of the tight infill site, while providing the necessary space for the client’s current and future needs.
‘The original plot had permission for a home of around 90 sq m, but we managed to achieve more than double that by maximising the underground potential,’ she says. ‘Creating the basement enabled us to free the upper floors from ancillary spaces and create a more open home.’ The basement is designed around two cleverly configured courtyards that allow ample amounts of light to reach the lower depths of the building.
As you travel up the elegant top-lit timber staircase, daylight flows down into the lower levels. On the first floor, comprising a small dressing space and master bedroom with a large picture window, soft pink clay plaster is complemented by cork flooring and Siberian larch timberwork. ‘We employed a natural material palette to create a warm and calming atmosphere,’ says McMahon. ‘The concept for the top floor was that it should feel special, as if suspended in the air.
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