Why calm architecture is becoming the new luxury
A still from the Samsung Germany Instagram campaign, filmed at Herbert Paradise in Kensal Rise. The warm tonal palette and soft daylight filtering through the rooflight are architectural qualities, not set dressing
Earlier this year, Samsung Germany selected Herbert Paradise as part of a campaign promoting their glare-free television technology. The shoot produced something we didn't entirely anticipate: the house didn't just provide a backdrop for the product. The architecture became part of the argument.
What the campaign instinctively reached for, in choosing this particular building, was an atmosphere. Not a style, not a look, but a quality of spatial experience that's harder to name and considerably harder to manufacture.
What the House Actually Does
Herbert Paradise was designed as a low-energy EnerPHit retrofit in Kensal Rise. The technical story is well documented: 75% reduction in operational energy, solar generation that exceeds the household's consumption, MVHR throughout, an air source heat pump replacing the gas supply. These outcomes matter and we're proud of them.
But the experience of the house is something else.
The first thing most people notice when they walk in is that it feels calm. Not empty, not sparse, but settled. The air quality is consistently good because the MVHR system filters everything coming in. The temperature is stable across the seasons because the fabric does its job. The acoustic environment is quieter than you'd expect from a mid-terrace in inner London because an airtight, well-insulated building absorbs rather than amplifies.
These are the side effects of building science. But they're also the primary experience of the building, and they're difficult to separate from the design decisions about light, material, and spatial organisation that were made alongside them.
Light as the Main Material
The house was designed with considerable attention to how daylight enters and moves through the spaces. Not brightness, specifically, but quality: the depth of window reveals, the way shadow falls across textured surfaces, the relationship between the degree of openness to the garden and the degree of enclosure in the main living spaces.
These decisions don't read dramatically in photographs. In the building itself, they change how the space feels entirely.
Deep reveals reduce glare and create a softness at the perimeter of rooms that flat window openings don't produce. Muted, natural materials absorb light rather than reflecting it, which reduces visual fatigue in a way that's felt rather than consciously noticed. The palette throughout is restrained not as an aesthetic exercise but because the house is designed to let daylight be the primary visual experience rather than competing with it.
When the Samsung team arrived to shoot, they didn't need to reconfigure the house to suit their purposes. The qualities they were trying to communicate, visual comfort, reduced glare, a screen that integrates into a room rather than dominating it, were already present in the architecture.
What the Campaign Reveals
There's something worth noting about what Samsung chose. Not a maximalist interior with a wall of glass and high-contrast finishes. Not a show home dressed to impress. A quiet, low-energy house in Kensal Rise, designed around comfort and atmosphere, where the television is part of the room rather than the point of it.
That choice reflects something that's genuinely shifting in how people think about the spaces they live in. The appetite for stimulation, more glass, more shine, more spectacle, is giving way to something more considered. People are increasingly interested in spaces that reduce friction rather than create it. Warmth. Stillness. Rooms that feel restorative rather than performative.
Herbert Paradise was designed before this became a cultural conversation. It was designed because we believed that a building's primary job was to make life better for the people inside it, and that technical performance and atmospheric quality were the same ambition pursued by different means.
Technology That Recedes
One of the more interesting aspects of watching the finished campaign was the relationship between the screen and the room around it. The television doesn't dominate the architecture. The architecture makes the technology feel better. These are different things, and the distinction matters.
At Herbert Paradise, the integrated joinery, the restrained material palette, the balanced relationship between shadow and light: all of these create conditions in which a digital experience feels richer precisely because the room itself is quieter. Good design in this sense is as much about what you remove as what you add. The absence of visual clutter isn't emptiness. It's attention.
A Broader Direction
We're not in the business of predicting trends. But what the Samsung collaboration made visible is something we encounter consistently in client conversations: people are tired of spaces that demand attention. They want homes that let them rest. That hold light carefully, manage temperature without effort, and feel genuinely comfortable to spend extended time in rather than impressive for the first ten minutes.
That's what high-performance, atmospherically considered architecture actually delivers. The technical case for it is well established. The human case, the case for what it feels like to live inside a building that was designed carefully from the fabric outward, is perhaps equally compelling.
Herbert Paradise appeared in a Samsung advert. More importantly, it demonstrates what we think architecture should be doing: quietly improving everyday life.
If you're planning a project and want to understand what this approach could mean for your home, we'd be glad to talk it through.
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