On Mykonos an architect has created an extraordinary private place of worship

On Mykonos, David Roy of James Gorst Architects has designed a private place of worship for a family, drawing inspiration from the Greek island’s traditional buildings to create pared-back spaces with a sense of calm

The sheltered courtyard garden, planted with a single olive tree, leads to a separate baptismal chapel that forms a smaller echo of the domed nave. There is also what is known as the meltemi chapel, named after the local meltemi winds. This is a quiet, contemplative hybrid space positioned towards the edge of the hillside, open to the blue sky but partly protected from the winds by its high rounded walls, which also feature integrated seating. All these elements are distinct, yet they share a common language and each contributes an important element to the chapel as a whole.

Although James Gorst Architects is best known for its residential work – mostly in the UK – the success of the Mykonos chapel has led, indirectly, to another commission for a religious building back in England. After being invited to enter a limited competition, the practice was selected to design a new spiritualist temple in Hampshire, the White Eagle Lodge, which is now being built.

‘We sent in various illustrations of our work with our competition entry, including this project. I think the judges would have noticed the chapel and, in a way, it is a precursor to the temple,’ says James Gorst, the founder and principal of the practice. ‘They are both fascinating projects and the chapel sits so beautifully on its site. It makes a fascinating counterpoint to the modern house alongside it with these deliberately softer, curvilinear elements, standing on an outcrop of rock, surrounded by wildflowers. It is a really perfect setting for the use of sacred geometries’.

James Gorst Architects: jamesgorstarchitects.com