Battersea House is a minimalist residence located in London, United Kingdom, designed by Proctor and Shaw. A post-war end of terrace house has been completely refurbished and extended with a contemporary loft and a modern rear extension by its architect owner. The original building is part of a post-war terrace built in the early 1950s on a bomb site. The home was extended to the side in the 1980s by the previous owner. The architects purchased the property in May 2017 and immediately set about a full refurbishment and extension project which included the full landscaping to both front and back gardens. The project started on site in August 2017 and completed in February 2018. They liked the post-war utilitarian design of the original building and looked at mid-century American domestic architecture, in particular the Case Study Houses by Craig Ellwood, for inspiration. In terms of massing they extended out the back as far as was reasonable and created level access to an excavated garden.

The loft has been full extended with a crisp modern full-width flat dormer. The design robustly expresses the construction and materiality. The ground floor extension is built in a light cream brick, which contrasts with the dark blue painted original brickwork. Glazing is full height and width, expressed as a plane, with thin capping details to disguise mass. Roof and ceiling construction is exposed and co-ordinated with discreet lighting, making positive architecture out the original challenging ceiling heights. The vertical circulation has been enhanced with a new custom painted steel guarding and balustrade. This in turn is co-ordinated with a crafted birch plywood stair case to the loft. The rooms throughout the house have been treated individually with color or materiality; dark green to the sitting room, pastel shades to bedrooms, unpainted plaster to the master bedroom, with tile and terrazzo to the bathrooms. The rear garden is simply laid out to accommodate areas for play, sitting and cooking.

Photography by Stale Eriksen