Hampstead House revives neglected Trevor Dannatt modernist home
Hampstead House by Coppin Dockray is the sensitive restoration of an overlooked Trevor Dannatt modernist home

Saved from possible demolition, a post-war Hampstead house designed by titan of British modernism, Trevor Dannatt, has had years of piecemeal additions peeled back in a refurbishment for a young, growing family. Coppin Dockray, an architecture studio familiar with employing historical sensitivity in its delicate revivals of 20th-century buildings, strikes a meticulous balance of preserving the house’s original character while infusing contemporary boldness and resilience in the new design. As a result, this is a versatile, unobtrusive, modern Hampstead house, cradled between grand Edwardian terraces and towering oaks.
Hampstead House by Coppin Dockray
Hampstead House faced a series of awkward extensions in the 1960s and 1980s and its own poorly constructed, uninsulated, and dated building fabric had to be prised from an overgrowing garden. While fully restoring Dannatt’s original California-inspired design was out of the question for practical reasons (some parts were too damaged to be salvageable), the architects and client agreed that reimagining its original elegance would be sufficient conservation and homage.
Sitting in a dip on a tricky wedge-shaped plot, the home is a checkerboard of stepped pavilions with roofs of varying heights surrounding a central courtyard. The house’s gardens and patios are brought inside through expansive windows and often double-height ceilings, each room offering a distinct landscape of flourishing British flora. To fit the new family’s needs, a playroom was added to the ground floor whilst additional bedrooms and a study formed the upper floor.
Unusually illuminated with natural daylight for a north-facing site, the materiality of the house is noticeably, deliberately simple. Solid brick walls, either left exposed or white-washed on the interior are connected by sweet chestnut flooring, bespoke joinery, and staircases. The kitchen, the heart of the home, glows warm with wood-panelled fittings under a large rooflight segmented with baffles. A collage of vintage, custom, and new furniture ornament the house, creating a 'lived-in', domestic quality.
In addition to the carefully chosen materials that no doubt will improve the home’s life span, improved ventilation and insulation factor into the renovation’s future-proof construction. ‘We worked methodically to improve the energy performance,’ the architects explained, adding that the result of these interventions was a notable 59 per cent improvement in the home's annual carbon emissions.
‘Despite the site’s restrictions, animated, dappled light always tracks through the interior spaces via discreet clerestory windows, a double-height void, or attentively framed window views,' write the architects. Indeed, in spite of the difficulties and restrictions tied to working with such a challenging, rich site, this breath of fresh air to the new family home renders it as charming as it was 60 years ago. 'For such a slender north-facing building, it enjoys a surprising and constant in-between quality – neither ever fully interior nor exterior.'
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
This nostalgic exhibition dives into a century of British surfing
Cornwall's National Maritime Museum charts the history of waveriding on England's south coast
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Waiheke Island is a must-visit for oenophiles and aesthetes alike
Discover what to do during this New Zealand destination's annual Walking Festival and beyond
By Jessica-Belle Greer Published
-
Bold colours and tactile textures: inside Bottega Veneta's second fine jewellery drop
The collection is composed of two parts: Enlaced and Alchemy
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Showing off its gargoyles and curves, The Gradel Quadrangles opens in Oxford
The Gradel Quadrangles, designed by David Kohn Architects, brings a touch of playfulness to Oxford through a modern interpretation of historical architecture
By Shawn Adams Published
-
A Norfolk bungalow has been transformed through a deft sculptural remodelling
North Sea East Wood is the radical overhaul of a Norfolk bungalow, designed to open up the property to sea and garden views
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
A new concrete extension opens up this Stoke Newington house to its garden
Architects Bindloss Dawes' concrete extension has brought a considered material palette to this elegant Victorian family house
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
How to protect our modernist legacy
We explore the legacy of modernism as a series of midcentury gems thrive, keeping the vision alive and adapting to the future
By Ellie Stathaki Published
-
A former garage is transformed into a compact but multifunctional space
A multifunctional, compact house by Francesco Pierazzi is created through a unique spatial arrangement in the heart of the Surrey countryside
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
A 1960s North London townhouse deftly makes the transition to the 21st Century
Thanks to a sensitive redesign by Studio Hagen Hall, this midcentury gem in Hampstead is now a sustainable powerhouse.
By Ellie Stathaki Published
-
The new MASP expansion in São Paulo goes tall
Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP) expands with a project named after Pietro Maria Bardi (the institution's first director), designed by Metro Architects
By Daniel Scheffler Published
-
Manchester United and Foster + Partners to build a new stadium: ‘Arguably the largest public space in the world’
The football club will spend £2 billion on the ambitious project, which co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe has described as the ‘world's greatest football stadium’
By Anna Solomon Published