APA has transformed a London warehouse space into an apartment for two theatre and film directors
Architects:ย APA
Location:ย London, England
Year: 2016
Area: 1.324 ftยฒ/ 123 mยฒ
Photo courtesy:ย APA
Description:
โArchitecture firm APA has transformed a London warehouse space into an apartment for two theatre and film directors, adding a raw steel volume that houses a movie archive and a bathroom.
Both Ibelhauptaite and Fletcher were drawn to the apartmentโs expansive windows, which โ prior to the renovation โ were partially hidden by the arrangement of rooms. The windows, along with metal fire doors, are the only original details that remain intact.
โThe old factory has a roughness, an authenticity, which appealed to Dexter, whose film background supports a love of architecture seen through a lens, in movement,โ said the designers. โDaliaโs operatic set-design skills became the design core around which the space was manipulated.โ
A black metal cube influenced by the original fire doors was added to the middle of the apartment. This houses a bathroom, film and book archive, and laundry facilities.
With surfaces that slide open and closed, the cube incorporates raw steel walls, blackened mesh screens, metal shelves, recesses and decorative niches.
Each side of the cube is characterised by a different function. One is for reading and sleeping, another for working, as well as a kitchen space for preparing food and dining, and a living area socialising and relaxing.
โThe metal box represents the core of our creative work,โ said the clients. โThe director always takes the empty black box and with his imagination creates images, stories, sets and architectural pieces within it โ an entire material world which in turn is filled with emotional journeys of the characters.โ
โThat is why the metal box inside the apartment looks quite closed from the outside, but has the ability to constantly change and evolve, never be the same,โ they continued.
โIt is like a living piece and when you start opening it, you find that it holds a massive amount of films, books, the whole big archive of materials and photos from our films and theatre showsโ
The cube also accommodates a bathroom, which the clients describe as โthe most important place in the houseโ.
Throughout the rest of the apartment, a monochrome palette is highlighted by industrial steel blues, rich dark olive greens and unexpected textures.
The choice of materials and furniture are inspired by the coupleโs family histories and journeys they have made together, including solid oak shelves, black ash screens, and mountain-climate blankets.
โBefore world war two, Daliaโs grandfather had a wood factory, which made matches and wood planks in a small Lithuanian town,โ said Fletcher.
โWhen the Russians occupied Lithuania and it was incorporated into USSR, that factory was the main reason to send Daliaโs grandfather and his nine children to Gulag in Siberia for eight years of hard labour camps.
The main wall in the bathroom is covered in textured tiles, which were sourced from Japan.
Japanese shoji screens dividing the bedroom were custom-designed to echo the pattern of the windows. At night, light shining behind the translucent screens gives the apartment a cosy feel. Shoji screens are similarly used to divide the spaces inside a studio and showroom for a landscape architect in Japan.โ
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