Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now.

Mo-Tel House

Office S&M

SAVE SUBMISSION
Bronze

1 / 10

Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
JURY VOTES
Colour
5.57
6.00
6.57
6.43
6.14
Natalie Badenduck
Natalie Badenduck Associate Professor at Mount Royal University
Notions of borrowing, reuse and ada...
5
6
6
7
6
Gregory Melitonov
Gregory Melitonov Partner at Taller KEN
5
5
7
5
5.5
Melvyn Law
Melvyn Law Director / Principal Designer at Limelight atelier
Thought to inject multi functional...
5
6
6
7
6
Manuela Mannino
Manuela Mannino Architect at THDP
7
7
7
7
7
Hamish Guthrie
Hamish Guthrie Founder and Director at Hecker Guthrie
6
6
6
6
6
Anna Gavrichkova
Anna Gavrichkova Founder at LEFT design
5
6
7
7
6.25
Justin Donnelly
Justin Donnelly Creative Director at Jumbo
6
6
7
6
6.25
Designer
Client
Tamsin Chislett
Floor area
55 ㎡
Completion
2020
Structural Engineer
Photographers

Mo-tel House is a remodelling of the lower ground floor of a Victorian townhouse in Islington, London, for a young family of four. The name Mo-tel House signifies the clients’ aspiration for their home: a joyful, bright and colourful escape from grey London. Alongside a brief to transform the previously damp, dark, and cramped area and bring it back into use, Office S&M was invited to create a space full of surprises and delight for each member of the family to enjoy. The reimagined lower ground floor now features an open plan, dual aspect kitchen and dining space achieved by removing internal walls, and a further two bathrooms and utility space. More unusually, the architects have designed all the furniture and deployed colour, mirrors and lighting to dramatic effect. The cooking and dining area incorporates plinths to climb, soft surfaces to nestle in, tiny spaces to crawl into. Tropical colours and tinted mirrors are used throughout to reflect and frame views, distorting scale and suggesting worlds beyond. The client, Tamsin Chislett, is co-founder of Onloan, an online service based on lending fashion rather than consuming it. These ideas of borrowing and reuse were carried through in the project, with every material being borrowed, reused and reframed for a new purpose. Office S&M chose materials with a previous existence and a story to tell: surfaces made from melted, discarded milk bottles and chopping boards, to form shiny, luxurious marbled worktops in the WC, bathroom and utility room; green terrazzo for the kitchen is made from marble chips and offcuts; and light pendants from recycled brick grog. The architects designed each piece of furniture to serve more than one function. A pink and blue bench with crested canopy acts as dining seating, cosy reading nook, storage, regal throne, and cabinet to display curiosities collected during the family’s travels. This allows each family member to find new uses for the furniture, and through this reinterpretation and multiplicity of uses, longevity is secured and waste is reduced. The blue larder with a curved top is used to store food and kitchen tools, allowing the architects to combine most of the homeowner’s storage requirements into a single unit. The larder removed the need for above counter kitchen storage cabinets, which allowed views to be maintained across the space, creating a feeling of openness. The larder has a projecting ‘nose’ which illuminates the worktop for the parents to prepare meals. It also has a circular ‘eye’ with a reflective mirrored ‘eyelid’, which blinks each time a family member opens the door. The suite of robust furniture pieces, each designed to be as much a small piece of architecture as an item of furniture or a building in a city, creates a series of interconnected but distinct spaces. By playfully dividing the plan, the furniture and colours both separate and connect, framing views across the room and creating an architectural dialogue between its inhabitants and the characters. Peaks and arches create notional thresholds and a sense of enclosure to each of the spaces, as well as referencing the surrounding buildings and city. Countering the reduced sunlight to the lower ground floor, Office S&M designed the lighting to come from multiple directions to mimic the sun, so that different areas could be lit in varying ways, with the house owners in control of light levels and even able to remotely adjust light colours and tones to respond to the changing seasons and mood. Mirrors have also been used strategically to reflect light throughout the space and create elements of surprise. Tamsin Chislett, client, said: ”We asked for ‘not boring’, and boy did Office S&M deliver. Our kids adore the space, from their secret storage spaces to the fun use of mirrors. Personally, the colours bring me joy on a daily basis (not least during lockdown!). And as a family, we feel our desire for a creative, playful home was really listened to - Office S&M made magic happen on our limited budget."