ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in 15 seconds.
Subscribe to Interior Design
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Small But Mighty

Craig Kellogg -- Interior Design, 7/1/2012 2:00:00 AM

small by mighty

slideshow button

Before meeting at the Royal College of Art in London,Sophie Goldhill had a job at Foster + Partners, while David Liddicoat lived in Berlin, working for StudioDaniel Liebeskind. Their student union spawned the purchase of a sliver of London land, a marriage, and a professional partnership as Liddicoat & Goldhill. They then set about building themselves a small house. Very small. Before they came along, the 50th of an acre had hosted a one-car garage, actually a converted power substation. They subsequently had to buy a strip ofthe neighbor’s garden to get enough space for a second bedroom of a comfortable size, and even so, Liddicoat explains, they had to think “on a Japanese scale” to squeeze everything into the 860 square feet now permitted.

As general contractor, Liddicoat and Goldhill also counted on doing some of the interior framing with their own hands. Joists over the kitchen, dining area, and bedrooms—glue-lam larch, limed to avoid eventual yellowing—bear witness to the couple’s efforts. So do the kitchen, bathroom, and powder room’s cabinetry in white-lacquered MDF.

White lacquer offers a striking contrast with the black- glazed brick walls in those spaces. The brick is the same as the house’s exterior—chosen on the recommendation of local planners and the area’s conservation officer to help the newcomer fit into its Victorian neighborhood. An industrial import not usually used residentially, it sells by the truckload, hence the availability of extras.

Ever economical, Liddicoat and Goldhill similarly found outdoor and indoor applications for a more luxe material, gray-veined white statuary marble. “We went for the loudest patterning,” Liddicoat says. Book matched slabs enliven the front facade. In the bathroom, the marble tops the tub surround. In the powder room, there’s marble lining the floor and even the niche for the toilet paper.

Product Sources

M&M STEELSTOCK: FENCING (EXTERIOR).
HISTORIC LIGHTING: BULBS (KITCHEN).
BLANCO: SINK.
KWC: SINK FITTINGS.
FISHER & PAYKEL: COOKTOP.
SAMSUNG: OVEN.
LIEBHERR: REFRIGERATORS, FREEZER.
LE KLINT: PENDANT FIXTURE (DINING AREA).
ERCOL FURNITURE: CHAIRS.
BLINDS UK: CUSTOM WINDOW SHADE (BEDROOM).
STRATA TILES: WALL TILE (BATH ROOM).
DURAVIT: SINK, SINK FITTINGS, TOILET (POWDER ROOM).
BOSCH: WASHERDRIER.
DROOG: MAGAZINE HOLDERS.
OSRAM: LINEAR FIXTURE.
OMNITUB: TUB (BATHROOM).
CLEARVIEW SASH WINDOWS: CUSTOM WINDOWS.
MR. RESISTOR: CEILING FIXTURES.
LAMISELL: JOISTS.
DAAS BAKSTEEN: BRICK.
MARMI & GRANITO: STONE SUPPLIER.
ARDEN HODGES: LUMBER SUPPLIER.
MULTIBETON: HEATING CONTRACTOR.
FIRMAN GLASS: GLASSWORK.
LAZENBY: CONCRETE CONTRACTOR.
Comment
RSS
Reprints/License
Print
Email

Share this on
Facebook
LinkedIn
Twitter

Talkback
Related Content
»MORE

Advertisement
More Content
  • Photos

Top 10 Firms in Residential

From the magazine: 2013 Top 100 Giants: Top 10 in Residential

The big number: Total interiors fees for Interior Design's Top 100 Giants piled up to $2.6 billion in 2012, beating last year’s forecast by a cool $706 million. Here are projects by the firms ranked Top 10 in the residential sector. +read article

2013 Top 100 Giants: 21-30

The big number: Total interiors fees for Interior Design's Top 100 Giants piled up to $2.6 billion in 2012, beating last year’s forecast by a cool $706 million. Here are projects by firms ranked 21-30. +read article

2013 Top 100 Giants: 51-60

The big number: Total interiors fees for Interior Design's Top 100 Giants piled up to $2.6 billion in 2012, beating last year’s forecast by a cool $706 million. Here are projects by firms ranked 51-60. +read article
VIEW ALL GALLERIES