{"id":10987,"date":"2025-12-05T13:51:40","date_gmt":"2025-12-05T13:51:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rutha.org\/index.php\/2025\/12\/05\/office-sm-takes-aim-at-generic-suburbia-with-powder-blue-mews-block-in-kent\/"},"modified":"2025-12-05T13:51:40","modified_gmt":"2025-12-05T13:51:40","slug":"office-sm-takes-aim-at-generic-suburbia-with-powder-blue-mews-block-in-kent","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rutha.org\/index.php\/2025\/12\/05\/office-sm-takes-aim-at-generic-suburbia-with-powder-blue-mews-block-in-kent\/","title":{"rendered":"Office S&M takes aim at “generic suburbia” with powder blue mews block in Kent"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Goldsmith<\/div>\n

Blue fibre cement weatherboarding and porthole windows lend a “coastal character” to Goldsmith Mews, an infill housing block in Kent<\/a> designed by London architecture practice Office S&M<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n

Located in the village of Chalk \u2013 famous as a holiday and honeymoon destination of Charles Dickens \u2013 the block provides four homes on a site formerly occupied by derelict garages.<\/p>\n

\"Goldsmith
Office S&M has completed an infill housing block in Kent<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Aiming to counter what Office S&M<\/a> calls the “generic suburbia” of the village’s more recent architecture, the studio looked back to the traditional weatherboarded cottages typical to the area in Dickens’ day, which informed the block’s pale blue cladding.<\/p>\n

In keeping with this historical reference, the project was named Goldsmith Mews after Sarah Goldsmith, the first landlady of the Lord Nelson pub, which neighboured the site until the 1920s.<\/p>\n

\"Side
It is clad in blue fibre cement weatherboarding<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

“The development channels both the memory of the site and the coastal character of Kent, while departing from the area’s conventional brick vernacular,” the studio told Dezeen.<\/p>\n

“Kentish vernacular was exemplified by weatherboarding, which would have been present when Charles Dickens holidayed and honeymooned two doors up the road, but much of this has been lost.”<\/p>\n

“We wanted to bring this vernacular back in a contemporary way, referencing and acknowledging what was there, and making it the best we can do today,” it added.<\/p>\n

\"View
The block contains four homes<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Goldsmith Mews is fronted by an undercroft created by partially raising its first floor on pilotis. The sawtooth form of the first floor above shades a storage and entrance area with porthole front doors \u2013 a nod to the work of French modernist Jean Prouv\u00e9.<\/p>\n

Contrasting the pale blue shade of the fibre cement cladding and metal roofing above, the ground floor of the block has been finished in a shade of “buttery yellow”, which was also used for a horizontal band demarcating the first-floor level.<\/p>\n

\"View
A”buttery yellow” shade colours the ground floor<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

“The contemporary dusty blue and buttery yellow colour palette has been carefully chosen to avoid the material being viewed as entirely traditional,” Office S&M said.<\/p>\n

“It helps the roof and walls read in a cohesive way, further blurring the lines between floors and making the scale of the building indeterminate.”<\/p>\n

“Finally, it articulates the difference between the new development and the old suburbia, creating a clearer link to the past and also the possible future of housing,” it added.<\/p>\n