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1. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 01 The open-plan kitchen and dining space is punctuated by a double-height space, which loosely divides the two zones of use. 3888 px 2592 px 2 MB A4 print |
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2. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 02 The spaces are further delineated by large, white sculptural volumes, which define soft edges between them while providing storage. The kitchen is articulated as a composition of smaller-scale volumes variously finished in stone, timber veneer, and white paint. 2989 px 1988 px 2 MB Print - Low res only |
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3. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 03 The double-height space encourages social interaction between the ground-floor living space and the lower-ground floor dining space. 2592 px 3888 px 5 MB A4 print |
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4. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 04 2592 px 3888 px 5 MB A4 print |
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5. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 05 From the interior, windows to the rear elevation appear as voids in the plastic solid of the building volume, glimpsed between the sculptural planes of blade walls and volumes. 2592 px 3888 px 5 MB A4 print |
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6. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 06 A central volume of storage loosely divides the ground-floor living space into two zones, while doors concealed in this and other adjacent volumes allow the space to be separated into two rooms. 4223 px 2848 px 4 MB A4 print |
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7. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 07 The second floor hallway is naturally lit—directly by a frameless roof-light, and indirectly by a wall of sand-blasted glass to the top floor bedroom. 2592 px 3888 px 2 MB A4 print |
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8. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 08 2592 px 3888 px 1 MB A4 print |
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9. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 09 The staircase to the top floor is articulated as a sculptural, folded plane of timber. 2592 px 3888 px 2 MB A4 print |
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10. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 10 The top floor accommodates a glass-roofed shower, and a bedroom with its own small living space, top-lit by a motorized glazed roof and frameless roof-lights. 2592 px 3888 px 4 MB A4 print |
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11. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 11 The bedroom levels can be open-plan or divided into separate rooms by doors concealed in white-painted and timber-clad volumes and planes. 2592 px 3888 px 4 MB A4 print |
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12. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 12 2592 px 3888 px 4 MB A4 print |
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13. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 13 Internal high level glazing between bathroom and bedroom brings natural light into an otherwise internal volume. 2592 px 3888 px 5 MB A4 print |
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14. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 14 2167 px 3251 px 5 MB Print - Low res only |
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15. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 15 Modern slim black glazing to existing windows provide a subtle incorporation to the existing fabric of the building whilst modernizing the building and trying up with the new modern rear extension. 2592 px 3888 px 4 MB A4 print |
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16. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect Plans 16 1069 px 1850 px 91 KB Print - Low res only |
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17. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect Section 17 The lower-ground floor steps down the site, following the natural topography, while the double-height spaces provide overlooking vantage points, heightening the sense of the interior as an architectural landscape. 3942 px 2584 px 271 KB A4 print |
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18. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect Sectional Axo 18 The five-story house is split over eight levels, two of which are connected by double-height spaces. 2867 px 3836 px 347 KB A4 print |
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19. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect Axo 19 The interior of the house is a composition of overlapping rectilinear volumes and planes arrayed over eight levels. 4662 px 10072 px 1017 KB A3 print |
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20. William Tozer Associates_Vertical Intersect 20 A pedestrian rooflight allows natural light into the otherwise darker lower ground floor, making it feel bright and spacious. Simultaneously, the rooflight acts as separation between the more traditional shape of a Victorian bay window and the squared lines of a more modern internal approach. 2592 px 3888 px 2 MB A4 print |
This five-story house is sited in the middle of a Victorian terrace, and the exterior treats this historical setting as a found-object, preserving the London stock brick elevations and slate roof, but incising them with frameless glazing. The character of the interior is set by two double-height voids connecting the ground floor that one enters from the street, and the lower-ground floor, which is at garden level to the rear. Pedestrian-loaded glass to one of these voids brings natural light into a sitting area at the front of the lower-ground floor, while the other is open—visually and acoustically connecting the ground-floor living space and lower-ground-floor dining area. The other levels of the house have a loft-like character—concealed doors allowing them to function as open-plan spaces, or to be partially or fully enclosed into private bedrooms and bathrooms.
Project size | 355 m2 |
Building levels | 5 |
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WILLIAM TOZER Associates | Architects |