with its expressive facade, the 2000s-era 'blue house' is listed for sale in london
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with its expressive facade, the 2000s-era 'blue house' is listed for sale in london
"In London, FAT Architecture's Blue House sits along the steady line of Hackney Road in Bethnal Green, where its vivid facade disrupts the rhythm of the streetscape. Designed by Sean Griffiths, now founder of English studio ModernArchitect, the house is now listed for sale. Now, design lovers can take a fresh look at a work that has long held its place as a marker of early-2000s design."
"From the sidewalk, its blue cladding and crenellated parapet create a confident silhouette against the muted tones of the street. The building's profile expresses a studied sense of play, an approach that gives the home its distinctive presence while maintaining a sense of composure. Griffiths once described the project as 'a house within a house,' an idea expressed through layers of enclosure and a facade that wraps the living spaces in a kind of protective shell."
"Inside, FAT Architecture's Blue House (listed here) unfolds as a sequence of linked spaces arranged around slender columns and generous openings. Parquet flooring runs across the ground level, giving the interior a warm tone that anchors the cooler colors of the walls and fitted elements. A log-burning stove rests in the corner of the living space, adding to the sense of calm that underpins the architecture's more expressive moments."
FAT Architecture's Blue House occupies a prominent site along Hackney Road in Bethnal Green with a vivid blue cladding and crenellated parapet that contrasts nearby muted facades. The exterior balances a studied sense of play with composure and embodies a layered 'house within a house' concept through enclosing forms that wrap the living spaces. Interior spaces unfold as linked rooms organized around slender columns and generous openings, anchored by parquet flooring and a corner log-burning stove. Upper floors emphasize adaptability with two staircases creating separate circulation routes, curved edges softening thresholds, and material changes—moss-green carpet to cork—signaling transitions.
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