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THE SPEAR’S 500 Home & design


Simon Haycock Michaelis Boyd


FOCUS Residential, renovations David Kohn David Kohn Architects FOCUS Arts, education, residential


Sally Mackereth Studio Mackereth


FOCUS Luxury retail, high-end residential


Since its establishment in 1995, Michaelis Boyd has offered a wide range of architectural and interior design services, from residential new-builds through to renovations of hotels, restaurants and bars. Its work can be found in the UK, Europe, Africa, Nepal, Turkey and the US. Commissions include Soho Farmhouse, Kichwa Tembo Game Reserve in Kenya, the celebrated Groucho Club in London and the MK2 cinema group in Paris. Other gems include Parker Tower and Clerkenwell House. ‘We don’t have a specific practice


style, but there is a strong design DNA that runs through all of our projects as they respond to clients,’ says Simon Haycock, a partner in the firm.


David Kohn Architects was founded in 2007 by Cambridge graduate David Kohn. Based in Camden, his projects often follow competitive tenders. At New College, Oxford, the firm designed student accommodation and facilities for the adjacent New College School, a project worth £32 million. A refurbishment of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, meanwhile, entailed bringing the podium of Carlton House Terrace into the 21st century. Awards include Young Architect


of the Year in 2009, One-Off House Architect of the Year 2010, RIBA and D&AD Designs of the Year, Condé Nast and New London awards in 2012, along with World Interior of the Year in 2013.


‘Studio Mackereth takes its signature from an integrated approach that places as much importance on the interior spaces as the considered details of the architecture that defines them,’ says founder Sally Mackereth. The firm has been praised for this approach, with Lisa Grainger of The Daily Telegraph saying of Mews House, Hampstead: ‘The 18th-century house morphs into a space that is utterly contemporary... [it’s also] dotted with architectural surprises.’ The studio is a collective of architects and designers concentrating on luxury retail, commercial and high-end residential projects, with the firm also branching out into jewellery and furniture design.


Níall McLaughlin Níall McLaughlin Architects


FOCUS Inventive building materials


Architect Níall McLaughlin holds professorships at UCL, Yale and UCLA, and counts Young British Architect of the Year 1998 among his list of awards. The firm doesn’t specialise in particular styles, but in ‘high-quality architecture’. It works on town masterplans, schools and private houses, while favouring ‘the inventive use of building materials’ to bring out ‘the qualities of light and the relationship between the building and its surroundings’. Such principles are more


important than working in any particular style, he says. ‘We hope each project will be an original interpretation of the client, site, brief and budget.’ He has many esteemed clients, including Oxford University.


David Mikhail Mikhail Riches


FOCUS Residential


John Pawson John Pawson


FOCUSMinimalist aesthetic


Ben Pentreath Ben Pentreath


FOCUSUrban development


Demetri Porphyrios Porphyrios Associates


FOCUS Private housing, masterplanning


Leaders in residential development, David Mikhail and Annalie Riches work for private developers, housing associations and local authorities, and restored Park Hill Sheffield, a historic Grade II building which is the largest listed structure in Europe. An example of the firm’s renovation abilities is East London House. After multiple alterations, this Grade II-listed building had become a jumble of dark rooms, but was restored by Riches to its original elegance. The sweeping staircase and the


new extension are a powerful demonstration of the practice’s prowess at blending faithful restoration with innovation. The firm is also one of few to report a zero per cent gender pay gap.


‘Simplicity in architecture and design’ is John Pawson’s motto, and he delivers on it.


Known for his minimalist


aesthetic, Pawson’s portfolio is brimming with clean, slender lines, with pristine white the colour of choice. However, this does not indicate a lack of diversity: his Paros houses are endlessly inventive, while still being fitting additions to the parched Grecian landscape. The firm has completed projects


everywhere from the Japanese island of Okinawa to Montauk in the US. Each design is carried through with the same meticulous sense of space and light, with Armonia Apartments in Athens exhibiting a particularly strong sense of place.


Ben Pentreath, the Royals’ interior designer, has proved his worth not just with his skill in master- planning and urban development, but also with his eye for interiors and unique private homes. Pentreath often produces classical designs – in fact, he’s one of only a few left who work well in that milieu. Pentreath’s portfolio conveys a mix of new Georgian farmhouses and country manors with an occasional rectory renovation, all beautifully finished. There’s also an element of fun:


in the Pig on the Beach Hotel in Studland, his extension to the main house and two ‘pepperpot’ buildings were wittily designed in the cottage orné vernacular.


Demetri Porphyrios has a simple philosophy: ‘balancing the requirements of the brief with the necessities of good construction and the expectations of civility and beauty’. His firm offers a range of


architectural and interior services, and is renowned for excellence in design and following the classical tradition, but with a contemporary twist. Porphyrios has also received commissions for projects at Oxford and Cambridge, and is working on Whitman College, Princeton and the Needhams Point development in Barbados. He has also held several esteemed professorships over the years, including that of visiting professor at Yale.


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