A classical Hampstead house cleverly reconfigured for modern family life
‘It really reminded my husband of the house he grew up in,’ says Sophie Henderson, remembering the first time she and Jaime Williams viewed this house in Hampstead. ‘His mum loved houses and interiors – she had an amazing eye – and she was such an influential person in his life.’ Jaime has clearly inherited her talent, as he is currently training at the Inchbald School of Design while running his own record label. Sophie, too, has a real knack for design and works in the creative industry as a copywriter. Their combined skills would soon prove very useful, but first there was work to be done.
Built in around 1920, this double-fronted, red-brick house offered plenty of character and much-needed lateral space, with three main floors. ‘Our son is severely autistic and our old house in Islington had too many stairs,’ explains Sophie, who was delighted to find a period property with a more practical layout. However, there was a catch. ‘It had a funny L-shaped kitchen at the back, with a breakfast area at one end that felt like a corridor, and two downstairs loos,’ recalls Sophie. If the house was going to function properly for them, their son Ralph and their daughter Letty, a reconfiguration was in order. For this, they turned to architecture firm Powell Tuck Associates, whose work they had seen at a neighbour’s property in Barnsbury.
‘The house is quite unusual in that it doesn’t have a back as such, because it adjoins another property,’ explains Angus Shepherd, director at Powell Tuck. Instead, there is a garden to the right, with doors from the sitting room, and a garage and courtyard on the left, with a side gate. Now, a glazed extension provides an enclosed walkway right from the gate to a country-style boot room, which is perfect after walks on the Heath with their dog Bunny.
The extension then segues into an existing side porch, which has been transformed into a beautiful space in its own right. A roof light illuminates the steps down to the basement, which have been opened up to create a striking architectural feature, and one of the downstairs loos has become a smart new pantry. It is enclosed by elegant oak-framed glazing that extends to form the outer wall of the kitchen. ‘They didn’t want that Crittall door look, so we referenced a more historic design with the wood,’ says Angus. This is Sophie’s favourite part of the kitchen, especially when the light bounces off the glass. More light filters through a nearby window, which looks straight onto the next-door house, but has been cleverly disguised by a glass-fronted cabinet built directly into the wall.
Despite its position at the back of the house, the kitchen is now very much at the heart of things. It’s just a hop, skip and a jump along the corridor – the breakfast area is long gone – to the garage-turned-playroom, where Ralph and Letty are always within easy reach of their parents. Here, and between the kitchen and dining room, the walls have been replaced with an innovative system of sliding panels for a flexible, ‘broken-plan’ layout. ‘We wanted it to feel like a family home, but keep the character and make it a bit more interesting,’ says Sophie, which is true of every decision they made with Angus. His work did not end here, though. He also masterminded a conversion of the loft, developed the roof garden on top of the garage (and improved access by installing french windows in the main bedroom), designed new bathrooms and created some bespoke pieces.
One notable example is the display cabinet in the sitting room filled with colourful glass bells, which were collected by Jaime’s mother over the course of 50 years. Much of the art in the house also came from Jaime’s mother and father, while some of the furniture was inherited from Sophie’s parents. In the wrong hands, this eclectic mix could quite easily have appeared disparate and poorly conceived, but Sophie and Jaime have created distinctive yet coherent schemes.
Like the earlier stages of the project, the decoration was very much a collaborative process, with Sophie and Jaime working alongside upholsterer Andrew Miller and Angus’s wife Sarah Shepherd, who is a colour specialist. ‘We started with our love of pattern and Arts and Crafts,’ says Sophie, pointing out the William Morris wallpaper in the sitting room, which showcases antique oil paintings and Warhol prints, high-street and vintage finds, and even lines the back of the bell cabinet.
While some fabric choices were clear cut – the Josef Frank design on their headboard, for instance, had long been a favourite – others took a little more consideration. Andrew joined Sophie on trips to Chelsea Harbour to assist with last-minute decisions, before making up the blinds and curtains and re-covering pieces of furniture. When it came to paint colours, Sarah was always on hand with excellent suggestions for a sympathetic and harmonious palette. ‘Now that I think about it, it’s quite exciting that we threw a lot of different stuff together and it stuck,’ reflects Sophie. ‘It just shows that you can celebrate all the bits of your life and it really can work.’
Powell Tuck Associates: powelltuckassociates.co.uk









































