Located amongst detached double-fronted Victorian villas and handsome stucco-fronted terraces, Hampstead Town House stands as somewhat of an anomaly. Constructed on a wedge-shaped piece of land left over from the orthogonal placement of 19th Century buildings around a tight bend in the road, the internal footprint of the house narrows to a width of 2.2m at the rear of the house with an overall ground floor footprint of just 30m2.
Built in 1970 by an Engineer and his wife, the house remained unaltered and their home for over 50 years. Externally, the house has a dynamic, monumental and gymnastic form which belies its modest scale: three stepped cantilevers over its five floors optimises the volume available and gives a Baronial sensibility to its modernist character. Internally, the house had been appointed a sense of the deluxe comprising timber linings and a marble-lined sunken bathroom.