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Ellie Stathaki

Don’t Move, Improve 2024: London’s bold, bright and boutique home renovations

Aden grove house exterior part of the shortlist at Don't Move, Improve 2024.

Don't Move, Improve 2024, the annual competition celebrating residential extensions and redesigns in London, has returned for its 14th edition, revealing its shortlist today (18 April). The nominees for the coveted top spot, to be announced in a dedicated ceremony in London in May, are 16 home designs that span the width and breadth of the capital. 

The designs on the list represent a wide variety of residential solutions – from homes in immaculate, minimalist architecture, to reworked modernist marvels, boutique and cost-effective dwellings, and abodes using innovative, sustainable materials. The shortlist was selected from 60 longlisted projects, which in turn were picked out of a total of over 150 submissions. Scroll down, to feast your eyes on the shortlisted works. 

Don’t Move, Improve 2024: the shortlist


Aden Grove by Emil Eve

(Image credit: Taran Wilkhu)

London Fields-based architects Emil Eve have completed the renovation and extension of a period home in Newington Green that wraps up a dynamic material palette, energy efficiency and personality all within its tight 19th-century footprint. 

Apartment with a Mezzanine by Office Ten Architecture 

(Image credit: Sarah Rainer)

Office TEN crafted a clever loft conversion and internal reconfiguration at a first and second-floor apartment of an existing building in northwest London, combining Japanese and Scandinavian sensibilities, while drawing on the capital's urban context. 

Chelsea Brut by Pricegore 

(Image credit: Johan Dehlin)

This robust and handsome 1960s Chelsea townhouse has been given a modern makeover by London architects Pricegore, preserving the tough character of the original architecture and adding functionality, texture, colour and even an element of brutalist charm.

Flitch Cottage by Whittaker Parsons 

(Image credit: Ellen Hancock)

Whittaker Parsons led the design transformation in this Walthamstow home. The scheme included opening up the living space to a flowing, garden-facing interior, as well as bringing lots of light in. 

The Green Machine by SUPRBLK Studio

(Image credit: Nicholas Worley)

This ingenious compact design slots a multipurpose piece of furniture which can transform an east London studio's single room into living space, dining room and bedroom, in different configurations. 

Heyford Avenue by Manuel Urbina Studio

(Image credit: Rayan Bamhayan)

Heyford Avenue was a Victorian terraced flat in poor condition in South London. Manuel Urbina Studio reworked the interiors to make the most of the existing space, working with minimalist surfaces and materials such as washed-plaster and micro-cement finishes. 

Hillside House by Mike Tuck Studio 

(Image credit: Luca Piffaretti)

Bold and colourful, this transformation is a family home in Waltham Forest. Now, its small and dark kitchen has been enlarged, the living space is a flowing, multi-level, functional and bright space, and bonus areas include a pantry and ample storage. 

House extension in Stoke Newington by VATRAA 

(Image credit: Jim Stephenson)

This Hackney project elegantly reconfigures the interior of a period home, extending towards the rear and adding a green roof, ASHP and PV panels to boost its environmental credentials along the way. 

A House in East London by Charles Holland Architects 

(Image credit: Jim Stephenson)

Clients Will Wiles and Hazel Tsoi-Wiles took on the restoration of a Victorian house of ill-repair in the Mile End area of east London, committed to a sensitive but spirited intervention, rather than simply plugging on a rear-end oblong box. Charles Holland, co-founder of Ordinary Architecture, ex-director of FAT and founder of his own practice in 2016, is known for his post-modernish play with colour, shape and architectural details. 

House Made by Many Hands by Cairn

(Image credit: James Retief)

Few homes are as forward thinking-ly sustainable as this compact home extension in east London. The Hackney property uses a variety of warm, earthy textures with a pioneering, new low-carbon concrete in a London first.  

Jacob's Flat by Paul Archer Design

(Image credit: courtesy Paul Archer Design)

This generous Edwardian flat in Haringey has been brought to the 21st century by Paul Archer Design. The design includes a colour pop of a yellow kitchen in the living space, new rooftop vistas, and a bold red loft extension. 

Perforated House by Novak Hiles Architects 

(Image credit: The Modern House)

What used to be a 1960s bungalow in south London has been brought to the 21st century by Novak Hiles Architects, who added modernist charm and a sense of luxury and comfort through an array of updates – including the perforated brick walls that give the home its name. 

Tin Hat by nimtim architects

(Image credit: Megan Taylor)

Nimtim, a prolific architecture practice in the residential sector, have sprinkled their magic on a tired home in Forest Gate with Tin Hat, a scheme that united two separate flats into a single, modern dwelling set in a Victorian end-of-terrace house.

Triangle House by Brown Urbanism

(Image credit: courtesy Brown Urbanism)

This inspiring and unusual, self-build, 40 sq m home fits perfectly in its triangular plot, making the most of its size while punching above its weight in both comfort and style in West Hampstead. It even includes its own green patio. 

Two-Up Two-Down House by Khan Bonshek

(Image credit: James Retief)

Two-Up Two-Down House exemplifies just how the typical London terrace can be a blank canvas for the adventurous architect. For the project, husband and wife architectural practice Khan Bonshek took on a substantial project to completely overhaul a Victorian house in east London. The resulting home radically rearranges the interior volumes, pushing the space right to the limit of what's possible, while adding a modest brick rear and rooftop extension.

Wimbledon Villa by Gundry + Ducker

(Image credit: Andrew Meredith)

Set near the greenery of Wimbledon Common, this is a project that reimagines a simple white-box home from the early 2000s. Residential experts Gundry + Ducker redesigned the space aiming to create a 'country house in miniature'.

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