Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Architecture Wednesday: The Woven Home

This modern four-bedroom home is an exciting fusion of high-tech materials and exquisite craftsmanship and sits just minutes from some of the best beaches on the Kent Coast. The home is surrounded by mature trees, which create a feeling of absolute seclusion and privacy while the innovative façade in repetitive geometric swirls softens the angular lines of the house’s form.

The house, nestled in its woodland plot behind a broad driveway with space for several cars, sits on raised steel stilts sunken into concrete pile foundations. The simplicity of the design is enlivened by the intricate façade of recycled sculptural modules that wrap around the house, establishing a trellis for climbing plants and softening the edges of the house such that it melds with the surrounding trees.

Inside, the generous expanses of glazing welcome light and nature. On the ground floor the living spaces have been arranged around a central service area which houses utilities, a half bathroom, storage and the stairs to the upper floor.

This pushes the living spaces out towards the light and establishes a flowing 360 circulation around the ground floor, split broadly into four quadrants. A heated polished concrete floor runs throughout the downstairs, unifying the spaces and providing an industrial accent to the cantilevered timber beams and cross-laminated timber walls which it sits alongside.

Entry is to a wide foyer with built-in storage; the kitchen stretches out to the left and a large kitchen island centers the space and provides a gathering space. Beyond this is a distinct dining area overlooking the rear lawn and perched beside double-glazed doors which step out to the garden. This rear half of the house is shared with a beautiful living room while a more secluded living room is tucked in a front quadrant and can be partitioned by heavy curtains to soundproof the TV and create privacy as a guest space.

A bent steel staircase rises through the center of the house to the first floor and its four equally sized-bedrooms. The wide landing has space for a desk overlooking the treetops. The bedrooms are all en suite with slightly different configurations. In two of the rooms, clever joinery slides across to reveal and conceal an in-room bathtub and separate shower room. The other two bedrooms at the back of the plan are dual aspect and have shower room en suites.

From the landing, an elegantly crafted curved step rises to the sliding doors that open to the terrace which peaks through the treetops to the sea beyond.

Over time, the house and it’s trellis exterior will blend more and more with its surrounding. Cleverly conceived planters sit within the houses’ façade, and already climbing jasmine, clematis and wisteria are creeping across this intricate frame.

It will become one with the garden.

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9 comments:

  1. Curious, I should like a contemporary glass and steel house. The exterior looks a bit like a fancy birdcage. The bathtubs in the bedrooms do nothing for me, and my initial reaction was what cheap tile in a new and expensive home. The ground floor is tight, the bedrooms are tight. I'd keep looking.

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    1. It is interesting but I keep thinking spider webs and plywood.

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  2. Interesting, but the greenery will eventually obscure the views.

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  3. Wild. In a good way. Nice open plan, and the central hall for the bedrooms is nice. The only weird thing might be the tubs in those two bedroooms.

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  4. I love it, mostly because of the huge windows and the natural beauty outside. I appreciate the idea that the house will be enwrapped in nature!

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  5. Intriguing design. I like the modern aesthetic with all that glass and light, but it does feel a bit like living in an art exhibit. The layout seems a little cramped for such a bold concept. I’d keep exploring other options.

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  6. Anonymous10:49 AM

    the dog''s mother
    xoxo :-)

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  7. As they say in real estate—location, location. The Kent Coast is east of London. I know London has special appeal to some, but for me, it’s the weather. The average highs from May to August are 59°F/15°C to 70°F/21°C. That’s a little too cool for me.

    Let’s talk about today’s feature. I love the layout of the home. The exterior is unique. Personally, I don’t like vines growing up alongside the outside of a home. I like to see the full effect of the exterior—not camouflaged by growth. I love the expansive windows; light has always been important to me.

    Inside, the first thing that catches my eye is the finishes. The blond wood looks unfinished—almost like plywood. I guess some would call that a raw or unfinished look. I’ll pass.

    I do appreciate the layout of the floors. The ground floor is a flexible space that you can arrange as your needs dictate. Some of the rooms look a little tight—claustrophobic, even. Those bedrooms need to breathe a little more.

    I will not be using the big light. I’ll need to make sure I can fit at least two lamps in every bedroom. And you should know me by now—I hate free-standing bathtubs that take up valuable real estate. I suppose it’s okay since it’s in an ensuite bath and private, but I would hate trying to relax in my bedroom with a bathtub staring at me.

    I would, however, enjoy the deck on the second floor—to read, relax, and enjoy the weather.

    Thank you for sharing, and have a great Wednesday.

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