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Yet as the homeowners will testify, fashions have a habit of coming full circle. ‘Since we came back from Hong Kong, we’ve lived in Surrey, and we wanted a second home in central London,’ says the husband, a corporate lawyer. ‘It had to be a place with enough room for us to be together as a family but where our grown-up children could also have their own space.’

The property

Almost as an afterthought, an agent showed them this flat. Set on the second floor, it was the double-fronted reception room with bay windows overlooking the street that piqued the couple’s interest. ‘We’d previously viewed mews houses but this gave us the large living area we wanted,’ says the owner. The rest of the apartment was, however, decidedly frowsty. ‘The bathrooms were tired and the kitchen had almost no light,’ says the owner. In the Eighties, the original cornices, fireplaces and architraves had been ripped out. Everything presented a challenge. At which point their agent introduced them to interior designer Katie McCrum. The couple’s brief was ambitious: ‘We envisaged a luxurious apartment with a Parisian feel and an open-plan living area,’ says the owner. The predictable solution, says Katie, might have been to position the kitchen at one end of the long room. Instead, a chunk of space was ‘stolen’ from the bedroom next door so that the kitchen sits in a recess echoing the shape of the bay window opposite. To bring definition to the room, Katie designed a pair of cabinets painted navy to mirror the fireplace opposite. ‘All the other rooms involved a series of debates about light or storage to make sure everyone had a place of their own,’ says Katie. Starting again, every wall was removed and the layout reshuffled. Now there are three bathrooms and three bedrooms. Throughout the flat, a brace of design tricks enhances light and space. Mirrors illuminate dark corners and tall, glazed doors bring light to the sitting room, where the oak parquet floor adds an illusion of width. Traditional details – cast-iron radiators and wall panelling – have been reinstated sealing the result: a mansion-block apartment adroitly reinvented for 21st-century family living.

Hallway

The utility area is hidden behind cupboards on the right, while glazed doors leading to the sitting room bring in natural light.

Living room

The Belgian black stone fireplace mirrors the deep blue of the new units at the opposite end of the room.

Kithen

Bold black cabinetry creates a calm, atmospheric feel in this contemporary kitchen.

En suite

In this new space next to the couple’s son’s bedroom, floor-to-ceiling storage was designed to conceal the boiler, with smart brass detailing enhancing the deep-blue theme. See:A beautifully renovated Georgian home in London

Son’s bedroom

Sliding doors have been painted in the same color as the wall panelling for a cohesive, streamlined feel.

Daughter’s bedroom

A floating desk doubles as a dressing table, while a circular mirror hung behind the shelf adds an unexpected element.

Bathroom

The walls are clad in smooth Microcete offset by the traditional patterned floor tiles.

Master bedroom

Wardrobes screened by sliding doors trimmed in brass – a recurring motif of the flat – enhances the room’s seamless feel.

Bathroom

Once a dark, awkwardly configured kitchen, this space was redesigned by Katie into this elegant room where a glazed wall and floating vanity units to maximise the light. Katie McCrum, mccruminteriordesign.co.uk Photography/ Davide Lovatti