Biophilic architecture in London has never been more relevant. As families seek healthier homes, lower energy bills and deeper daily connection with nature, retrofit becomes a powerful tool for transformation. Twelve Arches embodies this shift.
Set in Queen’s Park, this ambitious renovation reimagines a traditional suburban house as a treehouse-inspired sanctuary, shaped by natural materials, soft daylight and a fabric-first, low-energy design approach. The result is a home that feels restorative, grounded and crafted for long-term wellbeing.
Timber stair and landscaped living wall forming a calming, nature-led circulation route through the home.
Biophilic architecture in London is fundamentally about reconnection — countering the city’s density, noise and visual overload with calm spaces shaped by light, texture and landscape.
For us, biophilia is not a style but a design strategy:
→ to improve health and comfort
→ to reduce reliance on mechanical systems
→ to enrich the sensory experience of everyday life
→ and to bring Londoners closer to nature without compromising urban living
Twelve Arches takes this principle and embeds it into every aspect of the retrofit.
Courtyard walkway framed by arches and planting, bringing natural light and greenery deep into the plan.
The home is organised around a central courtyard, a defining move in this biophilic retrofit. It delivers the benefits London families rarely experience inside their homes: natural ventilation, cross-breezes, shifting daylight and a quiet moment of landscape at the centre of the plan.
This courtyard illuminates deep rooms that were once dark. It also softens the boundary between inside and out, a hallmark of biophilic architecture in London’s compact suburban plots.
Treehouse-like balconies, elevated walkways and a series of framed views extend these natural connections across the home. Whether standing in the kitchen or climbing the floating staircase, nature is always in the periphery.
Arched walkway and integrated living green wall connecting indoor and outdoor spaces in this London biophilic retrofit.
At the core of biophilic architecture is an honest, tactile approach to materials — something we consider essential in London’s retrofitted homes, where carbon reduction and sensory comfort must work together.
The palette at Twelve Arches is intentionally grounded:
→ Timber for warmth, tactility and a measured carbon footprint
→ Steel for clarity, contrast and structural lightness
→ Brick for texture and familiar urban identity
→ Concrete for stability, thermal mass and acoustic calm
→ Natural plasters and mineral finishes for low VOC, breathable walls
These choices enhance air quality, regulate internal temperatures and give the family a home that feels textured, natural and deeply comforting.
Timber stair and landscaped living wall forming a calming, nature-led circulation route through the home.
Biophilic architecture in London is not limited to greenery or views. It extends into spatial rhythm, movement and daily experience.
At Twelve Arches, the floating staircase sits in a double-height volume, encouraging movement as a moment of connection rather than a transition. The sunken living room creates a grounded, intimate gathering space. The swimming pool reflects shifting light into the rear of the house, enhancing the home’s calming ambience.
Every decision supports slow, restorative living — something increasingly essential for Londoners managing fast-paced lives.
Rear extension and natural swimming pool showcasing the biophilic architecture that defines the Twelve Arches retrofit.
While biophilia gives the project its atmosphere, the home is fundamentally a low-energy retrofit. Improving the original building fabric was essential. We prioritised:
→ High-performance insulation
→ Exceptional airtightness
→ Triple-glazed windows
→ Thoughtful shading and solar control
→ Natural ventilation strategies
→ Low-energy systems that reduce operational carbon
This approach aligns with London’s retrofit agenda and demonstrates how biophilic architecture can support a truly sustainable future.
London’s existing housing stock is responsible for a significant share of the city’s carbon emissions. Retrofitting these homes is not optional. It is one of the most impactful climate actions available.
Biophilic architecture strengthens retrofit by:
→ reducing stress and supporting mental wellbeing
→ improving natural ventilation and daylighting
→ encouraging healthier patterns of living
→ reducing mechanical load and energy consumption
→ enabling families to stay in London homes long term
Twelve Arches shows how biophilic design can elevate retrofit from an energy upgrade into a complete lifestyle transformation.
In the end, Twelve Arches is a study in what biophilic architecture in London can achieve. It is a suburban home that feels calm, low-energy and deeply human. A place where natural materials, light and landscape are not decorative, but central to the way a family lives.
This is the future we believe in: London homes that are healthier, more sustainable and more connected to the natural world — without leaving the city behind.
At RISE, we believe biophilic architecture is more than an aesthetic choice. It is a way of designing that restores balance, strengthens wellbeing and reduces the environmental load our buildings place on the world.
A biophilic retrofit like Twelve Arches isn’t just a transformation of space. It is a recalibration of how a home should feel – shaped by daylight, natural materials and the quiet intelligence of the landscape that surrounds it. It shows what is possible when we design with nature rather than against it.
Thinking of transforming your London home through biophilic design?
Let’s talk about how your space can evolve into a healthier, low-energy sanctuary – one that nurtures family life today and leaves a lighter footprint for tomorrow.
→ Email us at architects@risedesignstudio.co.uk
→ Or call the studio on 020 3947 5886
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