Architensions Designs Townhouse of Seven Stories in London

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London, EnglandArchitensions has redesigned a townhouse in the Fitzrovia district of Central London, transforming the structure into a seven-story envelope for open space and light. Built in the 18th century and originally brought to life as a terraced house, the building is narrow and vertical; such qualities can lend an air of confinement to a structure and make divisions between floors feel stark. The storied nature of the townhouse might, too, be seen as a parallel to the dense and bustling city center in which it is located. Buildings of this sort are common in London, and the young couple living in this one were interested in challenging their home’s sense of spatial constraint and its original hierarchical division rooted in traditional domestic norms. Working with Architensions, they sought to uncover fluidity by facing and playing with the verticality of the house, and inviting qualities of light and openness to occupy more central roles in the space. 

Architectural ideals of Victorian homes were modeled on circumscription and propriety, with functions of rooms being defined by pre-ordained roles of gender and class. In homes that could afford to separate their occupants to such extremes, women, men, children, and servants were kept apart from one another in the interest of bolstering socio-political power dynamics within the home’s private sphere. This history plays a critical role in Architensions’ transformation of the townhouse, as the studio is broadly focused on challenging patriarchal traditions in the interest of designing a more collective and inclusive domestic sphere, a sort of “transgressive domesticity”. 

“Since we started to work on the project we felt we inherited the history of the building, the textures as memories of the past, uncovering all its layers but also social constructs, and using them as tools,” says Alessandro Orsini, co-principal, about Architensions’ relationship to opening up the space physically and, in turn, philosophically. “What can we learn from what is already there? Slowly we started to insert our own design elements in dialogue with these histories, the original joists, masonry walls, facade openings, etc.” 

Much of the building’s original envelope was maintained in the design approach to the transformation, with structural changes being primarily internal. The key to these internal updates lies in the presence of a new main staircase, which runs from the entrance level to the uppermost interior floor. The staircase that was present prior to Architensions’ transformation blocked a significant amount of natural light from entering the house, as the building’s southern windows faced directly into the staircase shaft. The newly installed ribbon staircase is made of white-painted, micro-perforated steel mesh, and offers a drastic shift where the presence of natural light is concerned. Now, sunlight that enters through the southern windows is diffused through the stairway’s porous metal, and reflected off of and emphasized by its white color. “Every floor has a different light condition but all the floors have natural light,” says Nick Roseboro, co-principal. “That was actually the prompt from the client, to maximize the natural light on each floor. The insertion of the new stair allowed us to use the stair shaft’s windows as a luminous element in communication with every floor and in dialogue between history and the new.”

This main, continuous staircase not only offers a welcome brightness; in its steel materiality it grounds the home, and in its vertical continuity makes a statement about the structural and aesthetic roles it plays. As a fluid artery connecting the different functions of five floors, the staircase adds an element of commonality that allows to unfold the kind of transgressive domesticity that Architensions aims to achieve. Above the entrance level, the first floor houses a living room and tucked-away reading area, while the second has a guest room and study. On the third is a private, main bedroom, above which is located a library. Through a seamless sliding glass door on the fourth is a front terrace with an exterior staircase leading to a rooftop. In the interest of creating a sense of expansive openness within the building’s verticality, Architensions worked to make living spaces as open as possible, avoiding sharp angles and harsh divisions between areas. This continuity between floors by way of the internal staircase is essential to the pursuit of openness and the transformation of the original spatial fragmentation. The stairs also function as a piece of furniture that the clients can use for casual seating—they might sit on a stair at the entrance level and take off their shoes before ascending to one of the upper floors, or catch a bit of warm daylight while resting on a step before one of the southern windows. 

Changes made to the basement also exemplify the prioritization of light in the transformation. Down a new straight set of stairs, which begins at the entrance level, one finds the basement area, containing the kitchen and dining room, brightened by way of an outdoor courtyard beyond the dining area in back, and a glazed rear façade running from the basement to the entrance level. Meanwhile, an opened-up areaway, previously an outdoor space exposed to the elements, has been merged with the basement to illuminate the kitchen, and represents Architensions’ only alteration to the original envelope of the building, which was realized through the studio’s close collaboration with London’s Landmark Commission.

Photography by Michael Vahrenwald/ESTO:

Drawings courtesy Architensions:

Project Credits:

​​Design Team: Alessandro Orsini, Nick Roseboro, Annalaura Pinto, Jihye Son

Structure: Format Engineers, James Solly

Acoustics: Sound Matters, Fabrizio Filippi

Photography: Michael Vahrenwald/ESTO

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About Architensions

Architensions (ATE) is an architectural design studio operating as an agency of research led by Alessandro Orsini and Nick Roseboro and based in New York & Rome. The studio was founded in 2010 as a vehicle to investigate the city and its spatial form and was re-founded in 2013 with Nick Roseboro. Diverse in backgrounds and creative experience, the studio looks at architecture, design, and the city with a perspective rooted in site-specificity enabling us to explore new ways to connect history and culture.

Architensions works at the intersection of theory, practice, and academia, focusing on architecture as a network condition in continuous dialogue with the political and social context and aiming to create new possibilities for the contemporary city. Our search for an aesthetic is an ever-changing process grounded in drawings, collages, sketches, and models. We like discrete geometries and grids, but we constantly seek new interpretations of their spatial outcomes. Researching and teaching for us is a mode of practice, not just in the academic space but also in the studio. We believe in a pedagogical approach to practice: we design and we learn at the same time. We expand our practice through writing to critically connect the ontology of our work with the discourse and curate to index the diverse architectural trajectories of our time. We see design as a way to define fields of action for the built environment that reconnect urbanism and architecture through processes that promote inclusivity and challenge the paradigm of architecture as a financial tool.

Our work and research have been published in international magazines such as Domus, Frame, Wallpaper, Architectural Digest, and exhibited at the Casa dell’Architettura in Rome, the Van Alen Institute, The Storefront for Art and Architecture, the Center for Architecture, and the Java Project Gallery in New York. In 2015, Libria published the volume Forma Urbana, focusing on studio research through a selection of projects and writings. Architensions was commissioned to design a large public installation for the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival 2022. In addition, the studio was profiled as the Next Progressives in Architect Magazine in September 2020, and in 2021, Cultured Magazine selected Architensions as part of their inaugural young architects list.

Alessandro Orsini is an architect and founding principal of Architensions with experience working on a wide range of projects both internationally and in the US. His work focuses on architecture at the intersection of the political, social, and environmental spatial networks with specific interests on redefining new modes of collective living. Alongside practice, he teaches design studios at Columbia University GSAPP and has served as a guest critic in various schools of architecture. He was also the director of the Summer Study Abroad Program from 2017-2019 at Hillier College of Architecture and Design at NJIT. Alessandro has contributed to journals including Vesper, Studio Magazine, and Forma Urbana, Architensions’ first book, published by Libria in 2015. Alessandro received his Master’s in Architecture “Summa Cum Laude” at Roma Tre University in Rome and was a visiting scholar at Columbia University GSAPP.

Nick Roseboro Assoc. AIA, is a designer and musician with experience across many creative disciplines. Following his music studies at The New School, he worked on various editorial and exhibition projects that evolved toward his first collaboration with Architensions. Roseboro’s research revolves around user interaction centered around perceptions of our environment. In particular, Roseboro’s interpretation of the urban context reads the city as a complex organism of social, civic, political, and ludic insertions within an ever-changing reality. In addition, he is interested in redefining architectural practice through curatorial, pedagogical, and cross-disciplinary means of exploration toward new architectural outcomes.

Roseboro has led many projects, including the experimental space Aesop World Trade Center, a large-scale installation for Coachella 2022, and a house in Long Island that questions aspects of domesticity. In Spring 2020, Roseboro joined “Design Advocates,” a network of designers and architects that provide research and design services to nonprofits and marginalized communities. His interests in the social aspects of design have led to his participation in various symposia and presentations on the studio’s research. Roseboro is the editor and designer of Architensions’ first book Forma Urbana, published in 2015 by Casa Editrice Libria and presented as a catalog to the studio’s first solo exhibition, Fifth Dimensional Cities, 2016. 

Contact

New York: 40 Park Street Suite 005 Brooklyn, New York 11206 Rome: Via delle Aleutine 106 B16 00121 Rome, Italy

[email protected]

architensions.com