What will the decades ahead look like, and how will your house evolve to incorporate them? Probably in more ways than you might expect, as your next home is likely to look very different from those of today. No, we’re not talking space for a Jetsons-era robot housemaid, but architecture that embraces and enhances the changes in our lifestyles.
One major shift is the rise in blended or multi-generational families as well as single-person households, meaning that traditional home layouts need updating. And because more people are working from home, a trend is emerging that is part of the ‘sharer economy’, where communities share resources such as meeting rooms and gardens.
COLLABORATIVE APPROACH
This new way of thinking is shaping developments such as Marmalade Lane, a RIBA award-winning project in Cambridge by Mole Architects. With 42 terraced houses and apartments, it’s one of the new co-housing concepts springing up around the UK, where residents collaborate to run the estate. Aspiring towards mixed, intergenerational living, it boasts vegetable gardens, a communal kitchen and a Common House containing guest bedrooms. The collective approach improves everyone’s wellbeing, from families to singles who may need more social interaction.
Perhaps your next home will be taking its lead from the architects AHMM and developer Solidspace, who have reinvented the mansion block in their project at 81-87 Weston Street near London Bridge station. The design avoids the dated one-size-fits-all approach with eight flats that include flexible open-plan rooms and self-contained bedrooms that can be rented out. Multi-level entrances offer privacy for those living together but separately. ‘We build on the principle of long life, recognizing that there are times when you might need a relative living with you, or visitors, lodgers or carers,’ says Roger Zogolovitch of Solid space.
Denne historien er fra April 2020-utgaven av Living Etc Magazine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent ? Logg på
Denne historien er fra April 2020-utgaven av Living Etc Magazine.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
modern extensions
WITH STRIKING USE OF COLOUR, MATERIALS AND SHAPE, THE LATEST DESIGNS ADD SO MUCH MORE THAN AN EXTRA ROOM
think like a pro
It's not just interior designers who are skilled at picking the perfect palette architects are in on the act, too, and Richard Parr knows just how to get the ideal shade
colour decoded
As with all successful schemes, there's much more going on beneath the surface of this space than first appears -Livingete's colour expert Amy Moorea Wong reveals all
enduring style
B&B Italia has pioneered modern Italian furniture design since 1966 - but its latest collection feels as fresh as ever
TALES OF THE UNEXPECTED
Seventeenth-century origins meet vibrant contemporary design in a cleverly reimagined Amsterdam canal house
ROCK OF AGES
The owners of a Menorcan home have made a stylish yet sustainable retreat using the island's signature stone
FORCE OF NATURE
An unexpected flood into what was already a dark basement flat prompted a new vision, full of light, natural materials and foliage
TOP OF THE WORLD
High above the busy streets of Bangkok, two talented designers have created a tranquil retreat that nods to chic 1970s style and makes the most of the views
A PLACE IN THE SUN
An apartment within a former luxury hotel celebrates - and updates - the style of France's Côte d'Azur
OUTSIDE IN
The design of this modernist bungalow in South Africa was dictated by the trees on the plot and the desire for an indoor-outdoor flow