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Hong Kong House by AR Design Studio: sensitive extension and renovation of a Victorian property

Hong Kong House by AR Design Studio: sensitive extension and renovation of a Victorian property

Architects: AR Design Studio
Location: United Kingdom
Year: 2017
Area: 8.000 ft²/ 743 m²
Photo courtesy: Martin Gardner
Description:

“The Hong Kong House is a private extension and renovation project, completed in late 2017 by Winchester based architects AR Design Studio. A world away from the client’s former home in Hong Kong, the house provides an opportunity for the family to have a familiar inside-out space to live in and relax.

Set beside an ancient Roman Road, the existing Grade II listed Victorian property is a beautiful townhouse of proud red brick. The clients bought the house for its scale and charm and approached AR Design Studio to help bring it up to modern standards and provide a much needed connection to their stunning walled garden.

AR Design Studio’s approach to the existing listed house focused on sensitive restoration. The removal of the existing kitchen allowed for the creation of a quiet drawing room while setting up an enfilade of spaces along the rear of the home. The family room is the bridge between the rooms of the home and the new garden room. Where once there were large windows, now there are cut-out doorways, allowing light from the glass link to flood deep into the house. Three steps are the threshold separating the old and the new, guiding you from a vertically formatted space into the horizontal space of the new garden room. A deep section of roof obscures the view of the pool and garden, which, upon arrival is revealed.

AR Design Studio’s approach to the existing listed house focused on sensitive restoration. The removal of the existing kitchen allowed for the creation of a quiet drawing room while setting up an enfilade of spaces along the rear of the home. The family room is the bridge between the rooms of the home and the new garden room. Where once there were large windows, now there are cut-out doorways, allowing light from the glass link to flood deep into the house. Three steps are the threshold separating the old and the new, guiding you from a vertically formatted space into the horizontal space of the new garden room. A deep section of roof obscures the view of the pool and garden, which, upon arrival is revealed.

Large double-glazed sliding doors effortlessly open to blur the distinction between inside and out. One minute a cosy living-dining area, the hub of the house, the next, a contemporary take on a garden pagoda, providing a place to escape after sunbathing by the pool. Perfectly designed for warm days hosting family and friends, surrounded by rustling weeping willows, climbing roses, and fruit trees, the garden is a quiet retreat from the hustle and bustle of daily life.

The garden room is clad in dark-grey fibre-cement board, chosen for its clean character and large format, to match the tone and colour of the existing slate roof. This theme is continued in the use of 3m x 2m ceramic grey tiles for the pool, landscaping and the interior floor with a flush threshold throughout to unite inside and out. The deep profile of the roof gives it a strength of presence helping to act as a visual staging post before the eye is drawn up to the existing home. Where once the house loomed over its quiet garden, now it embraces and draws it in.

The remaining spaces of home were redecorated, period features rejuvenated and the original wood floor exposed and treated. The entrance and side hall feature bespoke glass and timber staircases, designed to flood their connection spaces with light. This sympathetic restoration has helped invigorate the once dark home with lightness and space.”

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