Tour the contemporary and rule-defying home of a designer willing to experiment

As an industry professional full of ideas and ready to push boundaries, Irene Gunter created a joyful, one-of-a-kind dream home for her and her family

Irene Gunter is an interior designer who has always embraced a spirit of playfulness in her approach to house design. As a distillation of all the ideas her clients weren’t brave enough to try, her new home is remarkably unique. ‘In every room, there are elements of experimentation which have worked out really well,’ says the founder of interior design practice Gunter and Co.

The newly designed space is a result of a recent move, prompted by her and her husband Ian Hazard’s growing family – they now have two sons, aged six and one, so life in their second-floor apartment, lugging buggies, toys, and picnics up and down the stairs, had begun to seriously take its toll.

‘We wanted more space and to be on the ground floor. We found this semi-detached property dating back to 1900 nearby and it had a great footprint. I didn’t want to be limited by a partially improved property and loved that the property hadn’t been touched for over 30 years,’ says Irene.

‘In all that time, the owners hadn’t even replaced the carpets’, she continues. It was this feeling of limitless potential opened up by the need for a complete overhaul that made Irene so excited about the property. As an interior design expert, she was bursting with ideas to try.

Irene and Ian had found a great architectural shell but they knew that the heartbeat of their hardworking home would only be unlocked once they had fine-tuned the floor plan. ‘I like to engineer every centimeter out of a space. We spent an awful lot of time on the layout – it’s the foundation of the project – and if we hadn’t got that right, nothing would have worked,’ explains Irene.

Perhaps most striking was their decision to turn the traditional London terraced house plan on its head. Irene explains, ‘We flipped the kitchen and sitting room. The whole point of having a garden is that it is restorative and therapeutic so we wanted to sit, relax and look at it.’

It was this line of thinking that triggered their radical plan to move the central rooms around. ‘The sitting room is now at the back of the house, the kitchen has been moved to the front, and in the middle is a dining room and an enclosed playroom hidden behind a jib door in the paneling,’ she continues.

Equally ambitious was the couple’s decision to lower floors and build a new stylish staircase. ‘I always tell my clients that as long as they have good windows and ceiling heights we can take care of the rest,’ Irene comments.

‘We rearranged the levels to give more height throughout. In the kitchen, this meant we could tuck the work surface under the window ledge and the bedrooms in the new loft conversion don’t feel limited by the architecture,’ she explains. As a playground for Irene’s roaming and boundless imagination, her home displays no end of ingenuity.

‘For colors, I leaned on my gut instinct. I’ve spent hours thinking about what should go where and sometimes it’s far easier working for a client who gives you a few directions,’ she says.

‘There’s so much here that I’ve had in my mind for years but never had the opportunity to try, like the bobbin coving or townhouse cupboards in my son Oscar’s room, or the two-tone windows in the kitchen. It’s been a labor of love and I really want it to show my clients what’s possible if you take a leap of faith.

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