This unusually large four-bedroom mews house was built in the 1960s to a design by the noted architect Peter Bell, and was extended in the 1980s and 1990s. It offers flexible accommodation over three floors and further scope for improvement. The property is located in the ever-popular Camden Square Conservation Area. For more information on Murray Mews, please see the History section below.
History
Murray Mews charts the work of many key architects, with a particular focus on their approach towards challenging residential projects. Located on the eastern edges of Camden, each house was designed to serve the needs of its original occupants while also responding to the strict building and planning regulations imposed on the tight spaces that typically define a London mews.
The site was first recognised and developed in 1963 by Team 4, the architectural firm established that year composed of Richard Rogers, Norman Foster, Su Brumwell and Wendy Cheesman. The practice developed houses 15-19 using their favoured building components at the time: brick cavity walls and concrete floors. The project proved to be a challenging and often lengthy process, as the mews had to be developed in such a way that the public space was not overly encroached on by the newly built houses. The architects’ frustration with this is proven by their noticeable departure from this style in their later residential work, as evidenced by Rogers and Brumwells’ 22 Parkside, constructed at the end of that same decade.
Despite these challenges, the architects achieved their aim of establishing privacy for the occupants while simultaneously creating forward-thinking, open spaces using skylights and a predominantly axial structure. Indeed, these early homes are demonstrative of the type of work executed by many architects engaged in the housing debates of the 1960s. The development reflects a clear drive to create a built environment that served both the private requirements of their occupants and protected the needs of the community.
In the mid-1960s, these same design challenges were tackled and interpreted by the likes of Richard Gibson and Tom Kay, as Murray Mews quickly became a destination for other architects and their families. While by the turn of the century the mews had become less of an architect’s haven, in 2006 Hay Currey, a partner in FLACQ Architects, undertook his own project at number 32. The original design principles are structurally evidenced through the space’s open internal layout, however, its zinc external cladding can be seen as a significant point of departure from the brick walls of Currey’s predecessors.
In this way, Murray Mews has acted as a blank canvas for architects since the early 1960s, with each unique home respecting the aims of the original project, while also reinterpreting the design challenges faced by the urban space.
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