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Architectural Wise

Joe Burke bookends 1960s London terrace with compact brick home

Joe Burke bookends 1960s London terrace with compact brick home thumbnail

Leyton House by Joe Burke

Architect Joe Burke has self-built Leyton House, a home that bookends a 1960s terrace in London, using rough, pale brickwork and a concrete plinth for tactility.

Having purchased the existing end-of-terrace unit in Leyton, east London, Burke used its overgrown, 4.5-metre-wide garden as the site of the rental home, for which he acted as client, developer, architect and contractor while living next door.

Exterior view of Leyton House in London
Joe Burke has completed a self-build project in London

Leyton House creates a new street frontage for the terrace to the east, adopting the existing block’s proportions and fenestration, while contrasting its finishes with a palette of boardmarked concrete and pale brick with textured window surrounds.

“The design looked to maximise the potential of a narrow end-of-terrace garden plot while creating a building that remained well-proportioned, generous and sensitive to its street context,” Burke told Dezeen.

Studio space by Joe Burke
A standalone garden studio sits at the back of the garden

“We also knew we wouldn’t live there forever, so one element of the brief was making it a high-quality rental property,” Burke continued.

“Overall, we used standard materials but tried to elevate them,” he added.

Living space interior at Leyton House by Joe Burke
The open-plan living spaces lead out to a rear garden

In order to free up as much space as possible, Burke organised the interior of Leyton House around a bespoke plywood staircase and storage wall, which contains a cloakroom, pantry and bookshelves.

Opposite this unit is a central dining area flanked by an L-shaped plywood kitchen at the front of the home and a lounge area that opens into a rear garden.

The stair has been positioned on its eastern edge, with the void beneath it used as an extension of the central storage area. A high-level window pulls natural light into the staircase while avoiding overlooking from the street.

At the top of the staircase, the home’s skylit landing is unexpectedly lined with the same pale brickwork as the home’s facade, creating an almost external feeling space that links two ensuite bedrooms.

Landing within Leyton House by Joe Burke
A skylit landing is lined with pale brickwork

With the Leyton House’s future as a rental property in mind, most of the internal finishes were kept deliberately simple and easy to maintain, with white-painted timber ceilings and walls, glossy concrete floors at ground level and terrazzo and tiles in the bathrooms.

In the garden, a white-timber pergola looks across a small driveway to a standalone garden studio, with a pale green-metal gate providing access to the adjacent road.

Sheltering the garden from the street is a fence made by repurposing the concrete plinth’s shuttering.

Bedroom interior at home by Joe Burke
Two ensuite bedrooms occupy the upper floor

Elsewhere in London, architecture studio Nikjoo also bookended a 1960s terrace with a home for developer Flawk, creating a sculptural, curved brick form punctured by porthole windows.

Another self-build project in London recently featured on Dezeen is the “characterful family home” with three gardens created by the founders of Surman Weston.

The post Joe Burke bookends 1960s London terrace with compact brick home appeared first on Dezeen.

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