Powered by Squarespace

James Balston Photography on LinkedIn

1970s American Ansel Adams antiques apartment architect architecture art Art Deco artists balustrade Bar Barbican baroque barrels bathroom Bavaria beams bedrooms bespoke Birmingham black and white blue brass Brick Lane Brighton Bristol Brutalism building site cafe candles Casa Forma cellular chandelier chapel Chinatown christmas churches Clerkenwell cocktails collectors colourful commercial interiors concrete conversion cool Cornwall cosy cotswolds cottage Covers Crystal Palace Cultural Olympiad cushions damask Derbyshire Design Design Junction developer Diamond Jubilee dining room docks dogs dolls Dorset drawing room dresser dressing room East End ensuite extension exterior factory fashion finishes fit-out food France gallery GAP garden garden buildings garden flat Georgian Gherkin glass glazing gold grand granite hall Hardwick Hall Hastings Heart Home Magazine Hermes high street Home Cinema hotel house Industrial infrastructure inglenook interior designer interiors Ireland Islington jeweller joinery Kensington Kent kitchen Knightsbridge landscape lap club Leisure library lighting Lincolnshire living room Livingetc lLoft Loft London luxury marble markets Matteo Bianchi Mayfair mdf mediterranean metalwork mirrors modernism moroccan narrow boat National Trust Neo-Classical office Olympia One Hyde Park onyx open plan Oro Bianco park party Pavilion penthouse photography Pier polished plaster product property pub railway Redchurch Street reflection reflective Regency restaurant retail retro rococo roof terrace rosewood rugs salon sashimi Saturday Times Magazine screen screen printing Secession Shard Sheffield shop shopping mall show flat shower shrine sitting room skylight snow sofa spa spice sport spring St Tropez stained glass stairs stairwell station steps still life stucco Studio Indigo studios study styling sunburst Superbrands swimming pool tapestry Telegraph textile design thatched cottage The Triangle SE19 Tin House toilets trompe l'oeil TThe Triangle SE19 tulips victorian Vienna views Villa Villeroy & Boch Vinny Lee vintage wallpaper walnut wardrobe waterfall weatherboard wharves white window display windows winebar woodburner World of Interiors

I contribute to Heart Home magazine

I contribute to Interior Design magazine, Heart Home… inspiring readers to create their own great British Homes.

Entries in walnut (1)

Wednesday
Feb242010

All Mapped Out

The humble Victorian terraced house has been revolutionised over the last decade. For much of the last century, it was in decline; bombed by the thousand during the war, and many more destroyed during the fifties and sixties, by planners, eager to create a brave new Britain. Of those that remained, many were ravaged by poor quality conversion into flats and bedsits, often with any decorative features removed. However, throughout this period, the terraced house survived as an ideal housing model for many, despite the draughts, and the rattling sash windows. Any modernisation was often small-scale and cosmetic, with the general layout and style remaining fixed, bar the odd loft conversion and period style conservatory. Since the nineties, all that has changed, with the embracing of open plan living, contemporary glazed extensions, basement family rooms and roof terraces.

A few years ago, I was asked by Grand Designs magazine, to shoot one such reinvigorated house in north London, and, just recently, was approached by the architect to shoot one of his latest projects in south London. Pasquale Amodio, and his company, Map Projects, are expert at creating relaxed but elegant homes. Small Victorian rooms have been swept away, to create flowing, light filled spaces. Beyond the glazed extension, the garden is very much a part of the whole scheme, allowing inside and out to fuse into one continuous space.

No longer so humble, the terraced house has been given a new lease of life, which should see it through the next century and beyond.