An invisible house hidden away beneath a stylish Shoreditch street

When furniture designer James Shaw bought an empty plot in covetable east London, it required an unusual amount of ingenuity to turn it into a home
Fitting two people at the small end and four or five at the other Shaw designed the ‘pearshaped table to maximise the...
Fitting two people at the small end, and four or five at the other, Shaw designed the ‘pear-shaped’ table to maximise the efficacy of the space. The ‘B4’ stacking dining chairs are by Börge Lindau for Bla Station and the lampshade from John Lewis.Chris Horwood

The ‘underground house’ is now a category of home in land-scarce London. Shaw bought the plot of land in the same year architect Sophie Hicks completed her award-winning basement home and light has similarly been plumbed in via French windows (which open onto a small terrace) as well as a double-height skylight. “The neighbourhood cats love to come and sit on it,” says Shaw. As if in testament to the feat of the construction, downstairs concrete blocks remain exposed. This rawer, industrial palette is juxtaposed with the warm, brown-orange of the kitchen units, created from a veneer that has been twisted and sculpted to create a swirling pattern. The breakfast bar is on wheels, to make room for parties.

Rather than fight against the scale, the house Shaw and Ashby have created celebrates its smallness with a sense of humour. The bespoke sofa has been absurdly squeezed into the isosceles triangle of the corner. The metal, raised access flooring, typical of an office, has panels that can be lifted up with plungers, revealing storage space below. The dining table? Pear-shaped. “It means we have two tables in one. Small and intimate on one end, and a bigger space for four or five people on the other. If we had a square or circular table, we wouldn’t be able to fit as much in,” says Shaw. “People say the house is like a boat in its use of space – maximising every opportunity.”

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Living at the house with his partner, a writer – as well as their newborn daughter and cat, Rupert – the question of where to put books was approached by Shaw with utter seriousness and he built a momumental floor-to-ceiling bookshelf. As well as a rotating cast of artworks (the Jochen Holz neon in the hallway was a swap with a friend), Shaw’s own designs – from the baby blue handrail on the staircase to candle holders and his ‘blob’ lamps – are displayed throughout. Unexpectedly, however, it is the basement bathroom which wins on the charm front. Shaw bought samples of coloured tiles to create abstract, Anni Albers-inspired mosaics. Positioned against the mushroomy backdrop, the geometric forms include flowers, fruit, a duck and Rupert the cat. The side of the bath is mirrored, plunging the illustrations into dream-like depths.

Upstairs, the bedroom features a four-poster bed bedecked with – you guessed it – pear shapes. Whilst a first-floor bedroom might feel counterintuitive, for Shaw this positioning creates a calmer pace of life. “On a summer’s morning it’s nice to open the doors and sit in bed with a cup of tea. To just experience the flow of it,” he explains. Despite the paucity of the plot, outdoor space was a firm priority for Shaw, inspired by a 2018 trip to Japan and the architecture he saw there. “When [all the doors] are open there’s a point where you just have one post in the middle. There’s this seamless movement between inside and outside.”

In the acute corner of the basement the sofa was custom designed by Shaw and upholstered with Kvadrat fabric. The blue...

In the acute corner of the basement, the sofa was custom designed by Shaw and upholstered with Kvadrat fabric. The blue recycled plastic lounge chair, console table and lamp on the table are all also by Shaw.

Chris Horwood

The house’s “façadeless” façade – a front door and a bit of wall – belies the profundity of what's inside. Indeed, like the wardrobe to Narnia or Alice’s looking-glass, stepping into the house is to enter into a world of topsy-turvy, whimsical delight. Rather playfully – or perilously – Shaw moved in to the property whilst it was still a building site. This has led to a (welcome) absence of surprises since moving in. “It’s been such an in-depth, engaged process,” he says. “I could make decisions whilst I was physically living in the space. I knew exactly where the light would be in April at 11am.” Yet Shaw is keen that the house remains a mutable, transforming thing, and in particular has been pondering the changes a young child might occasion. “I don’t have any particular plans yet,” he muses. “But I guess I’ll just follow the process and see how things go.”