OPINION / NIC MONISSE
Make do and mend
One of the joys of living in London is the range of housing stock you can choose from when house-hunting – from Georgian townhouses in Bloomsbury to gritty converted warehouses in Dalston. Many buildings in the city have had a long life and have been repeatedly reimagined to meet the changing needs of residents. As a result, many have transformed from industrial to residential use, which, in sexy developer speak, means that they’ve been “adaptively reused”.
A recurring trend – based on my own house search in recent weeks – is that adaptive reuse in London largely sees developers stripping back and emptying structures, while leaving behind nooks and crannies (often where storage or machinery used to sit), thereby creating an abundance of inefficient and wasted space. It’s particularly disappointing given that there are some great examples of adaptive reuse in the city that make the most of such leftover room. Take architect Jonathan Tuckey’s own west London studio for instance, which is housed in a former pub. The existing cellar vaults here were difficult to access due to a low ceiling but by further carving them out, Tuckey was able to transform them into a print room, library and photography studio.
So why isn’t more being done at a residential level? Perhaps it’s because more of a premium isn’t placed on using these leftover spaces. There’s already demand for efficiency when it comes to lighting and heating – so why not include usable space in that equation too? We could challenge developers to build bespoke furniture, from shelves to seating, in difficult-to-use spots – cut-outs in remnant walls and between inconveniently placed structural uprights, for example – or even to take more drastic steps like Tuckey. If we want to find better ways of using our existing building stock, in London and in space-starved cities everywhere, then smart use of these odd shapes and leftover spaces will set us up for success.