Originally a two-bedroom, two-bathroom home, the apartment was completely reconfigured to create fully independent but seamlessly connected living and co-working spaces alongside one another.
Raising the roofline created the opportunity to add a loft between the living and dining areas underneath which is the unit’s largest piece of built-in furniture, a tall wooden volume aptly termed the “space marker”.
The centre of the space marker contains a walk-in wardrobe and storage, with a built-in tea-making station to the front and a set of timber steps, with integrated storage to the right, that lead up to the loft-style bedroom.
With the upgrading and repurposing of this previously single-use residential unit, Project #13 re-examines what a living and working space could look like, allowing for flexible use over time which will sustain the property over the course of its life.
Images by Finbarr Fallon