
Rosemont Reconsidered is a renovation that asks what a mid-century home would look like if it had been designed for the way we live now. The original structure has good bones — an honest plan, reasonable proportions, and a materiality that has aged with some grace. What it lacks is the spatial openness, the quality of detail, and the connection between interior and exterior that contemporary residential life has come to expect.
The renovation addresses these gaps without apology: walls are removed where the spatial logic demands it, new materials are introduced where the old ones have exhausted their welcome, and a new relationship to the rear garden is established through a carefully placed extension.

