Baltimore Sun Sunday

A London home, tucked away

Three generation­s of a family live together in the English suburbs

- By Alice Rawsthorn

LONDON — The only hint that something special might be hidden behind an unobtrusiv­e house, built in the faux rustic style typical of early-20thcentur­y English suburbs on Haycroft Gardens, a quiet residentia­l street in the Kensal Green area of north London, is the smart smoked larch wood on a door that looks as if it belongs to a garage.

Instead, it opens onto the plot of land where Christine Magid, 76, shares a home with her son, Ben, 40; his partner, Tereza Burgess, 31; and their 5-year-old, Ray. Surrounded by lovely old trees in a terraced garden that cannot be seen from the street, the house was designed by Sarah Wiggleswor­th Architects as a place where three generation­s of the family could enjoy the benefits of living together without forfeiting their privacy, while ensuring that Magid who, after a lengthy illness, sometimes has difficulty walking, feels safe and comfortabl­e.

“The house is such a long way from the road that it is very, very peaceful, and so thoughtful­ly designed that there are no steps, no stairs, and I can always look out onto the garden,” Magid said. “I lived here on my own for the first six weeks, and that was lovely, but then they all moved in, and that was lovely, too.”

Empty plots are scarce in London’s congested suburbs, and the Magids found theirs by chance. Having sold the family home after Ben moved out, Christine Magid rented an apartment from a friend in the unobtrusiv­e house on Haycroft Gardens, intending to stay for a short time while she looked for a permanent place.

Six years later, she had not found one but had become intrigued by the beautiful trees on a ramshackle plot beside the house (and behind a “garage door”) that was blighted by overgrown brambles and nettles and the debris of a derelict judo studio. When the site came up for sale in 2015, the Magids bought it and commission­ed Wiggleswor­th to design a

house there.

“By then, Mum’s health was quite bad, and stairs were becoming a problem, so the primary concern was for her to have a home where she could be on one level and that could accommodat­e all of us if we needed to move in with her,” her son said. “But we also wanted to create somewhere that would be beautiful for Mum and that we’d all love living in together.”

They also needed the house to accommodat­e caregivers comfortabl­y, should Magid need them. Tereza, Ben and Ray divide their time between England and Tereza

Burgess’ homeland, New Zealand, making it important that someone else could stay in the house to look after Magid while they were away.

Having approached several architects, they chose Wiggleswor­th, who shared their ecological objectives for the house and who had recently completed a three-year research project into how homes and neighborho­ods could be designed to enable different generation­s to live together.

“One conclusion was that intergener­ational living is a good way of providing mutual support and care in an informal way within families,” Wiggleswor­th said. “So when Ben presented the project to us, we all thought, ‘Wow!’ ”

The Magids had hoped to build a bigger house but were stymied by the local planners’ insistence that it should not seem obtrusive to the rest of the neighborho­od and by conservati­on restrictio­ns that prohibited building near the trees and their roots.

The outcome, the subject of a March article in The Telegraph, was an L-shaped building with an entrance in the middle that opens onto the shared spaces of the kitchen, dining and living areas in one wing, and to the personal spaces of bedrooms and bathrooms in the other.

Magid’s bedroom and bathroom are at the end of that wing, allowing for greater privacy. All the main rooms look onto the garden, as do discreet nooks, such as a window seat where someone can sit or read.

The doorways were designed to be wide enough so Magid could navigate them in a wheelchair or while using a walker. Building the house and the thresholds into the garden on the same level saves her and Ray from having to negotiate steps while moving around.

The interior surfaces are made from robust materials, including oak for the bedroom floors and a plant-based resin for the living wing floor, in case one of them falls or spills something. “They’re also a little bit softer and warmer for Mum to walk on than concrete,” Ben Magid said.

The site is on a slope that had to be preserved to protect the trees, so benches have been installed to give Christine Magid different views of the garden. The main flower bed is positioned near the house to allow her to water plants and deadhead roses with ease. The rest of the garden is designed to create areas where Ray can play on different levels. His bedroom has a door leading out into the garden, where there is a lawn for picnics and games, and trails of steppingst­ones to guide him around the site.

“Everything was designed to be childfrien­dly and fun for Ray as well as being safe for Christine,” Wiggleswor­th said. “We made it easy to see people in different parts of the house and garden so they can all look out for one another.”

 ?? ?? Christine Magid and her son, Ben, at the home she shares with him and his family in north London. Built around a garden, the home allows three generation­s of family members to look out for one another without sacrificin­g privacy.
Christine Magid and her son, Ben, at the home she shares with him and his family in north London. Built around a garden, the home allows three generation­s of family members to look out for one another without sacrificin­g privacy.
 ?? TIM CROCKER PHOTOS ?? The home shared by Christine Magid, her son, Ben, and his family in north London.
TIM CROCKER PHOTOS The home shared by Christine Magid, her son, Ben, and his family in north London.

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