vsszan641040719351.jpg Alwyne Place, Mitzman Architects. Photo: Richard Chivers
          vsszan641040719352.jpg Alwyne Place, Mitzman Architects. Photo: Richard Chivers
          vsszan641040719353.jpg Crossfield St House, Jonathan Pile Architect. Photo: Gareth Gardner
          vsszan641040719354.jpg Crossfield St House, Jonathan Pile Architect. Photo: Gareth Gardner
          vsszan641040719355.jpg Kenwood Lee House, Cousins & Cousins. Photo: Jack Hobhouse
          vsszan641040719356.jpg Kenwood Lee House, New Wave London. Photo: Jack Hobhouse
          vsszan641040719357.jpg House in a Garden, Gianni Botsford Architects. Photo: Edmund Sumner
          vsszan641040719358.jpg House in a Garden, Gianni Botsford Architects. Photo: Edmund Sumner
          vsszan641040719359.jpg 1A Earl’s Court Square, Sophie Hicks Architecture. Photo: Annabel Elston
          vsszan6410407193510.jpg 1A Earl’s Court Square, Sophie Hicks Architecture. Photo: Annabel Elston
          vsszan6410407193511.jpg Max Fordham House, bere:architects. Photo: Tim Crocker
          vsszan6410407193512.jpg Pocket House, Tikari Works. Photo: Edmund Sumner
          vsszan6410407193513.jpg Pocket House, Tikari Works. Photo: Edmund Sumner
         
We pay close attention to RIBA’s regional awards, which acknowledge outstanding contributions to the built environment, from cultural centres and schools to projects with sustainable merit and the best new homes in London and beyond.

Of course, it’s the residential projects that pique our interest the most, and this years winners, from BPN Architects’ Ghost House, a sunken, Tado Ando-inspired scheme, to James Gorst Architects’ sprawling contemporary farmhouse, showcase an inspiring range of 21st-century architecture.

Here, we’re sharing the homes that took prizes in the 2019 RIBA London Awards.

Alwyne Place, Mitzman Architects

Facing the challenging prospect of building in the Canonbury conservation area, this house, designed by Mitzman Architects, solves that problem by being somewhat invisible from the street, set back behind a high garden wall. Inside, a courtyard garden provides a focal point, while bespoke cabinetry and joinery form beautifully-crafted interior spaces.

Crossfield St House, Jonathan Pile Architect

Jonathan Pile looked to the timber-clad vernacular of 17th and 18th century Deptford when conceiving his self-designed home, which sits on an awkward site near the 1730 St Paul’s church. An internal courtyard – do we see a trend forming? – provides unexpected outdoor space, proving that even the most tricky, hemmed-in sites can provide some square footage of patio.

Kenwood Lee House, Cousins & Cousins

The judges of the London regional awards were impressed by this Cousins & Cousins-designed pad, which they commented sits ‘curiously in the territory between a home for either a Bond hero or a Bond villain’. While the street-facing façade is somewhat understated and sympathetic to the suburban locale, the rear elevation is dominated by expanses of glazing, giving the house its distinctive contemporary feel.

House in a Garden, Gianni Botsford Architects

The upwardly-swooping, wave-like copper roof of this new project from Gianni Botsford Architects makes for a bold and accomplished architectural gesture, and is surely one of the most shapely of its kind to exist in London. Together with additional light wells, the glazing-topped roof feeds light down into three levels, where a material palette of Carrara marble, Douglas fir and more copper form the refined interiors.

1A Earl’s Court Square, Sophie Hicks Architecture

Sophie Hicks Architects solved the problem of not being able to build above one storey in a conservation area in Kensington by designing this stealthy concrete and steel structure, which replaces two garages. We love the directness of the design, which is enhanced by the simple material approach.

Max Fordham House, bere:architects

The RIBA London Sustainability Award this year went to this considered contemporary mews house in Camden, which was designed by bere:architects to incorporate automated shutters to aid heat retention. Boosting the eco credentials is a biodiversity-helpful rooftop, Passivhaus accreditation and heat pumps, natch.

Pocket House, Tikari Works

The primary building materials of brick, timber and concrete have been left in beautiful openness at this new family home by Tikari Works, creating interior spaces that are ever-so-easy on the eye. We’re also taken by the use of recessed doors in the basement that can be opened to create a large open-plan space.
ArchitectureNews

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