Linden Hall
Linden Hall
Located in Guildford, this project is a carefully considered interior-led transformation of an existing home, where the architectural focus shifts from extension to refinement. Working within the constraints of the existing building envelope, the design introduces a series of precise interventions to recalibrate the plan, improve flow, and strengthen the relationship to the garden.
New openings, windows and doors are strategically inserted to draw light deep into the plan and establish visual connections through the house. A reworked ground floor creates a more open arrangement to the rear, allowing living spaces to unfold towards the garden. Framed views are carefully orchestrated, offering glimpses through successive thresholds, from the entrance hall through to the landscape beyond.
Central to the scheme is a new staircase and a cohesive language of joinery, where panelling, glazing and storage are integrated into a unified architectural expression. These elements do not simply sit within the space but actively define it, guiding movement and shaping experience.
The project demonstrates how a restrained palette of texture, colour and finely detailed joinery can fundamentally transform an interior, creating a home that is calm, cohesive and spatially rich without altering its overall form.
“It was an absolute joy working with Stylus on what would become my dream home. They always listened with patience and thoughtfulness and understood exactly what I was trying to achieve. They showed an incredible attention to detail and commitment to making sure that everything was exactly right. I feel incredibly fortunate to have engaged them on my project.”
Sebastian (Client)
Texture and Colour
The panelling is conceived as a refined, contemporary interpretation of traditional wall articulation, composed of slim, evenly spaced vertical battens set within a subtle grid of shallow frames. This creates a quiet rhythm across the surface, ordered, tactile, and precise, with fine shadow gaps introducing depth without visual weight.
Used consistently, the panelling becomes a unifying architectural device, linking the entrance hall and the library. In the hall, it forms a calm and measured backdrop to movement and arrival, extending along the length of the space and reinforcing its linearity. In contrast, within the library, it sits alongside darker, more enclosed elements such as shelving and joinery, creating a richer and more intimate atmosphere.
The restrained, warm neutral tone allows the panelling to read as both surface and structure, mediating between spaces while maintaining continuity. This contrast between light and dark, open and enclosed establishes a subtle hierarchy across the plan, where shifts in colour and texture define different moments within the house.
Materially, the approach is deliberately controlled. The softness of the painted timber, the warmth of the timber flooring, and the darker insertions of furniture and joinery work together to create a layered yet cohesive palette. The result is an interior that feels calm and composed, where texture and tone are used with precision to shape both movement and experience.
Open and Connected
The removal of a single wall redefined the spatial organisation of the ground floor, transforming a series of cellular rooms into a unified kitchen, dining and living environment. The plan now reads as a continuous volume, allowing movement, light and views to extend through the space and out towards the garden.
The existing kitchen was retained and rearticulated through a refined colour strategy, integrating it within the broader material palette of the project. New flooring establishes continuity underfoot, while enlarged glazed openings strengthen the relationship between interior and landscape, drawing natural light deep into the plan.
A considered lighting scheme responds to the vaulted ceiling and exposed trusses, using both natural and artificial light to emphasise volume, structure and rhythm. Though the interventions are precise and measured, their cumulative effect is transformative, resulting in a space that is cohesive, generous and closely connected to its setting.