Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

Architecture and interior design studio Project Orange have renovated and extended a home in central London to provide more practical spaces for a family that hosts a monthly dining club (+ slideshow).

Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

East London-based practice Project Orange moved the principle kitchen to the first floor so it is next to the dining room where the family entertain their guests.

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The new dining room features tables that can be arranged to accommodate different numbers of guests and built-in shelves at one end continue above the door on the perpendicular wall.

Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

Utilitarian, off-the-shelf products are used to furnish the kitchen, resulting in a practical space that is customised to the needs and tastes of the homeowners.

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The architects also designed an infill extension at the rear of the property that houses a smaller kitchen with a large skylight.

Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

Floorboards removed when new underfloor heating was laid have been reused on the walls and work surfaces in the downstairs kitchen.

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Partitions were introduced on the ground floor to create a small office and a snug, while the basement has been repurposed as living quarters for the family’s son and bedrooms, a master bathroom and another study are located on the second floor.

Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

Project Orange have also extended a redundant brick warehouse in Sheffield, England, by placing a contrasting black steel volume on top of building.

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Recent residential extensions on Dezeen include an addition to a single-storey house in Melbourne, Australia, with a translucent roof that looks like a lightbox, and an extension in Dublin, Ireland, covered in terracotta tiles that resemble brickwork – see more residential extensions.

Photography is by Jack Hobhouse.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Eaton Square house renovation

The client for Eaton Terrace runs a monthly dining club from their home in central London, and our brief was therefore not only to design a small extension providing more living space for the family, but to also reconfigure the existing house to better accommodate guests.

The key move was to shift the kitchen to the first floor alongside the dining room and reintroduce partitions at ground floor level to create an office and snug.

To the rear of the house we designed an infill extension with a huge rooflight to form a new day room. Bedrooms, the master bathroom and a second study are found on the second floor, with the basement re-designated as the son’s quarters.

Eaton Terrace by Project Orange

An original extension off the main stair contains a guest WC and second bathroom at half landings.

Both the kitchen and built-in furnishings have been carefully designed using standard products but with detail nuances introduced to help provide a bespoke and more quirky aesthetic.

A new underfloor heating installation requires the removal of the existing floorboards, which in turn are inventively re-used in the ground floor kitchen and a bespoke door lining to the dining room.

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192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The two storeys that London architects Project Orange have added to the roof of a redundant brick warehouse in Sheffield look like another building stacked on top.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The upward extension replaces a pitched roof, creating three duplex studio offices within a powder-coated steel volume that both overlaps and bites through the original brick structure.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

A new restaurant and bar occupies the double-height warehouse space below, where it benefits from light through the original two-storey-high arched windows.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

You can see more stories about extensions here.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

Photography is by Jack Hobhouse.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The text below was written by the architects:


192 Shoreham Street is a Victorian industrial brick building sited at the edge of the Cultural Industries Quarter Conservation Area of Sheffield.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

It is not listed but considered locally significant.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The completed development seeks to rehabilitate the once redundant building, celebrate its industrial heritage and make it relevant to its newly vibrant context.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The brief was to provide mixed use combining a desirable double height restaurant/bar within the original shell (capitalising on the raw industrial character of the existing building) with duplex studio office units above.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

These are accommodated in an upward extension of the existing building in a contrasting but complementary volume, a replacement for the original pitched roof.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

The new extension is contemporary yet laconic in form and an abstract evocation of the industrial roofscapes that used to dominate this part of the city.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

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It is parasitical in nature, engaging with the host structure in a couple of locations, where windows bite into the existing building.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

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The new roof profile creates dramatic sweeping ceiling profiles in the new accommodation, a sectional dynamism that is to be further enhanced by the use of double height volumes in the duplex units created.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

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The proposal is intended to enhance the existing building and create a striking landmark on the inner ring road; a symbol both of the area’s past and its aspirations for the future.

192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange

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192 Shoreham Street by Project Orange