American Cherry for a house in Caroline Place
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American Cherry for a house in Caroline Place

Amin Taha Architects | Groupwork

American Cherry for a house in Caroline Place
By Editorial Staff -

Amin Taha Architects + Groupwork have renovated a 1950s house in London’s Bayswater area, cleverly restoring travertine and cherry panelling using American cherry.
The house is in Caroline Place, a quiet enclave of late 1950s terraces north of Hyde Park and Kensington Gardens. Built with a modern Northern European sensibility of sharp brick lines and crisp mortar joints layered with softer timber detailing, the interior layouts remained firmly rooted in an earlier English Edwardian tradition.
“We were thrilled to be using cherry in this project as it is a much underused wood”, says Amin Taha. “It is the perfect material for interior projects because it is smooth, warm and very easy to finish as a luxurious surface”.
The house had a separation of served and servant areas of maids’ rooms, sculleries, coalhouses with a working rear yard. Servants occupied the ground level with owners set out above, across larger, light-filled rooms. In the immediate post-war period, Bayswater had begun to lose its lustre to that class, so much so that within a decade of being built, its new, younger inhabitants found these social conventions to be out of step with their aspirations. The house was remodelled and cleared out the interior sub-dividing walls and, where possible, the exterior, replacing these with what was felt appropriate at the time.
Four decades on, the new occupiers, a family of five, retain the aspiration for open-plan living with a desire for tactile material finishes and inevitably to different tastes.
A load bearing cantilevered travertine staircase rises from the basement floor with its underside left as “quarry found” while spiralling and rising to the skylight above. Together these strategies helped structure and define the new occupants’ preferred way of living, leaving enough flexibility for them to grow, change and delight in its details, which is perhaps the longer legacy of the restoration.
Early works revealed remains of original travertine flooring, densely plastered walls behind the 1970s pine boarding and one room lined with dark American cherry timber panelling.
The architects use cherry timber panelled cabinetry to spatially define the areas between rooms.
The first floor can be occupied wholly as a single reception room with a corner study area. Two adjacent full height bookcases can fold out and slide doors to enclose firstly the room then sub-divided it from the study. One of the bookcases, when pivoted, can fold out a guest bed to change the study to a bedroom.
Cabinetry elements are for these purposes all full height with shadow gaps and rebated lighting details to emphasise them as standalone and detached servants. Their purpose and scale are further expanded to provide utility in the form of bathrooms, walk-in wardrobes, and laundry rooms.
According to David Venables, European Director at AHEC, “American cherry is one of the world’s fastest growing temperate hardwoods, yet it is still being vastly underutilised. Caroline Place is a superb example of how this sustainable species’ rich reddish-brown colour can add a layer or warmth and sophistication to a project”.

About American cherry
American cherry is a supreme species from the U.S. hardwood forests and is unique to North America, with warm colour tones and superb finishing qualities. Forest Inventory Analysis (FIA) data shows U.S. cherry growing stock is 3.0% of total U.S. hardwood growing stock and that, while 4.3 million m3 is harvested each year, more than 11 million m3 of American cherry is growing naturally across the U.S. forests during the same period. The heartwood of cherry can vary from rich red to reddish brown and darkens on exposure to light with time. The sapwood is creamy white. Being hard and stable when dry, the wood is very easy to stain and finish to an excellent surface. It is highly prized for furniture and interior joinery.

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