Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
On Hewer Street in west London, a row of Victorian laundry buildings — later used as dairies and cattle sheds — has been reworked into a sequence of houses and apartments with distinct internal identities. This particular section of the northern terrace was shaped by retail architect Mark Roche, who retained the building’s industrial bones while carving out a three-bedroom home across two principal levels.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
Photography: Dan Glasser, courtesy of Hemingway+K.
The house extends to 2,906 square feet, where double and triple-height volumes organise the plan. A long, tapered entrance hall leads to a central atrium, its suspended steel staircase rising against a cement feature wall. Overhead, exposed timber trusses and pine slats temper the harder palette of stainless steel, micro-cement and Rosso Levanto marble. The principal living spaces occupy the upper level, arranged around a gas fireplace and open kitchen with breakfast island.
Three bedrooms and three bathrooms sit across the plan, including a principal suite with dressing room and mosaic-clad shower room. A renewed roof terrace adds 210 sq ft of external space. It’s listed for £3,450,000 with Hemingway+K.
