Interior view of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring fair-faced concrete, polished concrete floors, bespoke timber joinery, sculptural staircase design, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean living.

Green Lodge

Green Lodge

Set quietly into the edge of Putney Heath, Green Lodge is a low-rise dwelling shaped as much by its landscape as by its architectural ambition. Rather than asserting itself above its surroundings, the house is drawn into the ground, allowing it to sit comfortably within a sensitive and tightly constrained site in Roehampton Village.

Planning considerations and the proximity of neighbouring buildings demanded a restrained response. The solution was a carefully calibrated massing strategy that reduces the building’s perceived scale while unlocking a rich and generous internal arrangement. By lowering much of the accommodation below ground level, the house maintains a modest presence within its setting while opening itself internally to light, views and carefully framed moments of connection to the landscape.

The project embraces the complexity of its context. Mature trees surround the site, and the architectural character of the area ranges from Gothic Revival to Victorian, Arts and Crafts and contemporary interventions. Green Lodge responds not by imitation, but by establishing a clear and modern architectural language that is grounded in proportion, materiality and craft.

The building is organised around a clear structural and spatial logic. Two fair-faced concrete spine walls divide the plan into three distinct bays, shaping both the internal layout and the external form. Above, an asymmetric vaulted roof gives the house its defining silhouette, while internally it sets up a series of secondary geometries that inform the placement of rooflights, joinery and key spatial moments.

Clad entirely in larch, including the roof, the house reads as a singular, sculptural form. Over time, the timber will weather and soften to a silvery tone, allowing the building to further embed itself within the wooded landscape of the heath.

Stair and rooflight view within Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring fair-faced concrete walls, frameless rooflights, bespoke timber joinery, sculptural staircase design, and contemporary subterranean living.

“When it came to designing our own home, there was only one architect we considered. Matt and his talented team were given complete design freedom, and what they created was beyond anything we could have imagined. We are incredibly grateful for our amazing and truly unique home.”

Bartek (Client)
Close-up view of the bespoke fireplace at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, limewashed walls, minimalist fireplace design, and contemporary subterranean living.

The Client Brief

Green Lodge was an immensely rewarding project to deliver. The client, one of our long-standing and trusted contractors, presented us with a brief that was at once liberating and challenging: “Do whatever you want, but it has to be quick.” With that in mind, the design process began at full momentum from the outset.

Bespoke staircase and integrated timber library at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, integrated bookshelves, frameless rooflights, sculptural staircase design, and contemporary subterranean living.

A Stair as Architecture

The stair is conceived not simply as a means of movement, but as a key architectural element that articulates the building’s design language. Positioned beneath the large rooflight, it becomes a vertical thread that connects all levels of the house.

As light filters down from above, the stair and adjacent walls animate throughout the day, reinforcing the sense of depth and continuity between ground and subterranean spaces. In this way, circulation becomes spatial, sculptural and integral to the experience of the house.

Stair detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak staircase design, fair-faced concrete walls, timber joinery, and contemporary subterranean living.
Bespoke staircase balustrade detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring oak joinery, timber and steel balustrades, precision detailing, and contemporary subterranean living.
Street view of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath on Roehampton High Street in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring larch timber cladding, asymmetric roof design, and contemporary low-rise subterranean architecture.

Local Setting

Green Lodge sits within an unusually rich architectural and natural context. A Gothic Revival church lies to the south, while the surrounding streets include Victorian villas, Arts and Crafts houses and more recent residential buildings. The proximity of Putney Heath and the density of mature trees give the site a distinctly landscape-led character, one that strongly informed the scale, form and material choices of the design.

Exterior street view of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath on Roehampton High Street in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring larch timber cladding, frameless rooflights, asymmetric roof design, and contemporary subterranean architecture.
Close-up street view of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath on Roehampton High Street in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke larch-clad gates, integrated signage, asymmetric roof design, and contemporary subterranean architecture.

“The building does not shout; instead, it quietly settles into the landscape, almost sinking into the site. It invites exploration, revealing itself gradually rather than all at once. The material palette blends seamlessly with the natural setting of Putney Heath, allowing the architecture to feel both grounded and contextual.”

Matt (Architect)
Street view of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath on Roehampton High Street in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring larch timber cladding, concealed garden gate, sculptural roof form, and contemporary subterranean architecture.
Exploded axonometric architectural drawing of Green Lodge by Stylus Architects beside Putney Heath in Roehampton Village, Wandsworth, South-West London, illustrating contemporary subterranean architecture, frameless rooflights, split-level living, and timber-clad roof geometry.

Concrete Spines

Two fair-faced concrete spine walls run through the length of Green Lodge, forming the building’s primary structural framework. These spines break the plan into three distinct bays, reducing structural spans while establishing a clear spatial order.

Rather than being concealed, the concrete is expressed and celebrated. The spines reveal themselves in every room of the house, providing continuity, texture and a sense of permanence. As both structure and finish, they anchor the architecture, allowing other elements to remain restrained and precise.

Bedroom interior at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring exposed concrete walls, bespoke oak joinery, integrated lighting, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Interior architectural detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring exposed concrete, oak joinery, timber panelling, concealed storage, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Interior staircase and joinery detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, sculptural timber balustrades, exposed concrete walls, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean living.
Staircase and library view at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, integrated bookshelves, exposed concrete walls, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean living.
Rooflit landing with exposed concrete walls at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke timber balustrades, oak joinery, polished concrete floors, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean living.
Contemporary open-plan living space at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring frameless rooflights, exposed concrete walls, bespoke oak joinery, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean living.

Modern yet Warm

While clearly contemporary in its expression, Green Lodge avoids sterility. Material choices, natural light and carefully considered proportions give the house a warmth and calmness that make it feel grounded and lived-in rather than overtly formal.

Timber-clad exterior at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring vertical timber cladding, glazed sliding doors, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean architecture.

Clean Lines with a Clear Purpose

Every element of Green Lodge is driven by intent. Structure, form and material are closely aligned, resulting in a house where clean lines and strong geometry are not decorative, but purposeful. The outcome is a restrained and confident piece of architecture that is both highly resolved and deeply connected to its place.

Bespoke oak joinery and sculptural balustrade detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring integrated oak cabinetry, polished concrete floors, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
View through the window overlooking the lightwell and sunken terrace at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring vertical timber cladding, glazed openings, sunken courtyard design, and contemporary subterranean living.

An Overall Architectural Identity

Green Lodge is defined by a singular and consistent architectural identity, expressed seamlessly across interior and exterior spaces. From the outset, the project was conceived as a complete and unified whole, where structure, material and proportion work together to create clarity rather than hierarchy.

Materials are deployed with consistency and discipline throughout the building. The fair-faced concrete spine walls thread vertically through the interior and reappear externally as horizontal bands that articulate the building’s levels. These elements provide continuity between inside and out, reinforcing the sense that the architecture is read as one continuous composition rather than a series of discrete rooms.

Timber plays an equally unifying role. Bespoke timber frames wrap every window reveal, internally and externally, creating depth, warmth and a precise edge between building and landscape. The larch cladding that envelops the exterior is carried through into the interior design philosophy, where the same timber language is repeated in every piece of joinery. This repetition is not decorative, but intentional, allowing the material palette to quietly bind the spaces together.

Timber-clad extension with contemporary pivot door at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring vertical timber cladding, glazed openings, bespoke pivot door, and contemporary subterranean architecture.
Contemporary oak kitchen and dining space at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak kitchen joinery, polished concrete floors, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean living.

A Quiet Geometry

At the heart of the house, the kitchen is fully integrated into the architectural form. Housed entirely within the vaulted volume, it sits centrally within the plan, present but understated. Rather than dominating the space, it engages in a quiet dialogue with the surrounding rooms, reinforcing the calm and balanced character of the interior.

The kitchen island is positioned precisely beneath the largest rooflight, anchoring the space both spatially and visually. Above it, a bespoke lighting bar articulates the volume, carefully aligned to sit one third of the way through the rooflight, subtly referencing the golden ratio. This proportional logic extends throughout the building: the overall plan is divided into three primary sections, and the vaulted volume is further subdivided to form an asymmetric triangular geometry, again derived from golden ratio principles.

Throughout Green Lodge, no single element competes for attention. No space is overtly dominant, and no material claims primacy over another. Instead, structure, light, material and proportion work in concert. The result is a series of clear, carefully considered spaces and crafted details that all speak to the same architectural identity — quiet, confident and deeply resolved.

Minimalist oak kitchen with frameless rooflight at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, polished concrete floors, sculptural kitchen island, frameless rooflights, and contemporary subterranean living.
Contemporary kitchen and dining space at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring fair-faced concrete walls, bespoke oak kitchen joinery, frameless rooflights, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean living.
Bespoke fireplace detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring oak joinery, minimalist fireplace design, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean interior architecture.

Precision Joinery

Set against the robustness of the concrete structure, bespoke joinery brings warmth, refinement and human scale to the interiors. Carefully detailed and tightly integrated, the joinery is aligned to the building’s underlying grids, reinforcing the clarity of the architectural language. Storage, thresholds and built-in elements are resolved as part of the architecture rather than applied afterwards, ensuring that each piece has a clear purpose and place within the whole.

Bespoke oak joinery and timber wall panelling at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring integrated storage, natural oak finishes, minimalist detailing, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Bespoke oak joinery detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring integrated oak cabinetry, minimalist detailing, concealed storage, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
View through the glazed doorway at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring oak wall panelling, polished concrete floors, frameless glazing, and contemporary subterranean interior design.

“Joinery provided an opportunity to express the volumes, adding definition and a sense of drama. It became a means of articulating both the architecture and the craftsmanship.”

Matt (Architect)
Bespoke dressing table and arched mirror detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring oak joinery, fair-faced concrete walls, integrated lighting, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Bedroom joinery detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak wardrobes, integrated bedside joinery, soft architectural lighting, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Bedroom interior at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, integrated shelving, soft architectural lighting, and contemporary subterranean interior design.

The Quieter Moments

Away from the primary living spaces, the same architectural language continues with a more intimate tone. Bathrooms and WCs are treated with the same level of care, combining exposed concrete with bespoke joinery, pastel pink large-format tiling, and a finely detailed waffle oak ceiling that lights up to bathe the room in a soft, daylight-like glow, bringing warmth and texture to otherwise robust spaces.

Bedrooms are organised around the concrete spine walls, with built-in beds, desks and storage fully integrated into the joinery. In the children’s rooms, the architecture adapts to daily life, with wardrobes transforming seamlessly into workspaces. Carefully framed views out to the surrounding trees, and down into the sunken bedroom courtyards, reinforce a quiet connection to the landscape, allowing these spaces to feel calm, grounded and deeply considered.

Bedroom interior at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak joinery, integrated dressing area, warm architectural lighting, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Bedroom joinery and dressing area at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak wardrobes, integrated shelving, dressing table joinery, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Contemporary bathroom vanity detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring fair-faced concrete walls, sculptural stone basin, bespoke vanity joinery, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Contemporary bathroom interior at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring a sculptural bath, bespoke vanity joinery, brass fittings, textured wall tiles, and contemporary subterranean bathroom design.
Contemporary living space at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring large-format glazing, polished concrete floors, timber detailing, and contemporary subterranean interior design.

Integrated Craft

Architecture, artwork and building services are carefully interwoven throughout Green Lodge. Bespoke artwork by Matthew Withers is incorporated into the fabric of the building, including a piece that discreetly doubles as a cooling grille for the air-source heat pump. This layered approach reinforces the idea of the house as a crafted object, where function and expression are inseparable.

Contemporary dining space at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring bespoke oak dining furniture, timber wall panelling, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Contemporary living space and bespoke fireplace at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring oak joinery, minimalist fireplace design, polished concrete floors, and contemporary subterranean interior design.
Timber-clad exterior and sunken courtyard at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring vertical timber cladding, landscaped lightwell, large-format glazing, and contemporary subterranean architecture.

Cascading Light

Despite much of the private accommodation being located below ground, every room within Green Lodge benefits from natural light. South-facing lightwells line the rear of the house, bringing daylight deep into the subterranean bedrooms and bathrooms while providing each room with its own sheltered external terrace.

At the heart of the plan, a large rooflight above the stair draws light down through the house. This vertical shaft of daylight cascades from roof level to the basement hall, animating the circulation spaces and ensuring that even the deepest parts of the plan feel open, legible and connected to the sky above.

Timber-clad courtyard extension at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring vertical timber cladding, landscaped lightwell, sunken courtyard, and contemporary subterranean architecture.
Bespoke oak library and staircase detail at Green Lodge by Stylus Architects between Putney Heath and Roehampton, Wandsworth, South-West London, featuring integrated bookshelves, frameless rooflights, fair-faced concrete walls, and contemporary subterranean interior design.

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