

After years of inhabiting a tall Victorian terraced house with lots of levels and stairs, architects Jody O’Sullivan and Amalia Skoufoglou yearned for space to spread out. The couple, who founded O’Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects in 2016, didn’t have to go far to swap vertical living for horizontal—they found a 1930s Arts-and-Crafts-style home just around the corner. Set on a tree-lined street in London’s Canonbury neighborhood, the pebbledash-clad home was refreshingly wide and just two floors. Perhaps more importantly, it was unusually preserved.
“The man that lived here was born here and then died here as well,” Amalia says. “He had kept it in a very rudimentary state where there was no central heating, the windows were completely rotten, and the cooking and bathing facilities were very basic. But what was amazing was that all the original features—like cornicing and picture rails and fireplaces and layouts and door handles—hadn’t been tinkered with at all.”
The duo maintained as many historic elements as possible in the existing living areas, which they furnished with their collection of vintage treasures that make sense with the century-old surrounds. Then, they pivoted to a modern aesthetic for the conversion of the unfinished attic into an architecture studio and primary suite, using Okoume plywood and Troldtekt cement-bonded wood wool panels for a raw, minimalist effect. Let’s take a tour.
Photography by Ståle Eriksen.

















For more by the architects, see: A Kismet Renovation in Highbury, London, by O’Sullivan Skoufoglou Architects.
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