Game, Set and Match! Definitely No Double-Faulting
It’s not often you work on a project that is so inline with events of the day, but we at artichoke are working on one at the moment. We are just finalising the designs for an amazing client in Wimbledon, just down the road from Centre court.
The site is an ace one but is both within a conservation area and listed, so we have to be at the top of our game and not allow any of the advantages of the project slip by. The brief was to provide a slice of contemporary architecture served up with the retention of the listed house’s strong architectural features–a hard baseline to achieve.
It’s been an exciting project to work on as we have been able to lob ideas at the client with nothing being too outrageous to be looked into.
The works are predominantly
set at the rear of the house and include a steel mesh mezzanine deck
overhead of the kitchen area with
doubles up as the main social space in the house. The
point at which the new extension and the house meet has been opened up over two stories so the client’s
love of the original house features are retained rather than the extension
smashing into the original house. See what you think of our concept:

The client being game for a very modern design solution has let us use green roofs (alas not big enough for a game of tennis) and modern materials such as black timber cladding.
We like to think we have smashed the brief out of the park.
P.S. the hardest part of this project has been to fit 17 tennis references into this blog!







