2025 UPDATES
Our work has grown in scale and ambition, and so has the way we deliver it, with greater capacity, stronger coordination, and a broader range of expertise around the table. Over the year we’ve expanded our team through a combination of freelancers and a new Associate, supported by junior and architectural assistance as needed. We’ll share more on the studio’s evolving structure in early 2026.
We’re currently working across a number of live projects, with three on site and others progressing through design and technical coordination, while also extending our reach beyond London and into new regions across the UK and beyond. We’ll be sharing more updates in the new year, alongside new work on social media, with further project publication scheduled for Q2 2026.
01 - INDONESIA
Earlier this year we flew out to visit three sites in Indonesia for a client who wishes to develop unique buildings. We’ll be working on these in earnest in 2026, but we’ve already started on one of the sites and have some exciting updates already underway. The work spans both residential and commercial elements, including private villas alongside a spa retreat. We’re looking forward to sharing more in the near future.
02 - LEADERS GARDENS
We secured planning at the start of 2025 for a new-build house near a conservation area. We’re now on site, and we’ll share updates in the new year as completion is due in the summer.
03 - Ockendon House
Another north London project is on site and nearing completion, with practical completion due in 2026. We’ll share final photos and updates as it comes together. This is a three story extension with a grand ground floor space.
04 - NORTH LONDON VILLA
We gained planning a few weeks ago and are now coming to the end of the detailed design process (RIBA Stage 4), with tender scheduled for January. We’re aiming to be on site in February, with updates to follow as the project progresses.
05 - Restoring Country Cottage
JHA have been commissioned to restore and extend a stone barn, alongside the construction of two other units on a plot of Green Belt land. The work is inherently sensitive, shaped by its landscape setting, planning policy, and the existing fabric of the stone structure, and demands a careful balance between repair, adaptation, and limited, purposeful change.

