Inside Wimbledon House and the invention of high-tech modernism
MAR 3, 202618 MIN
Inside Wimbledon House and the invention of high-tech modernism
MAR 3, 202618 MIN
Description
I visit Wimbledon House — a quiet prototype that helped define the high-tech modernist movement. Designed by Richard Rogers in 1968 as a home for his parents, this isn’t a flashy building. But it’s radical in its restraint. Steel frame, panelled infill, exposed systems — a house built like a kit-of-parts, dropped into a leafy London suburb. It’s modular, demountable, and endlessly adaptable. But it’s also deeply personal. Wimbledon House translates the principles of industrial logic into the intimacy of domestic life. This film-based episode walks you through its structure, its rhythm, and the quiet conviction behind every detail. Key Topics: ● The origins of high-tech architecture ● Domestic scale as a testing ground for big ideas ● Transparency, honesty, and the ethics of exposure ● The house as a flexible system ● Richard Rogers’ early thinking in built form Links and Resources: ● Watch the film: Wimbledon House ● Explore: High-Tech Modernism theme overview ● Download: ‘What High-Tech Got Right’ — a guide to materials, systems, and ethics Quotes from the Episode: On exposed structure: "Nothing is hidden — the frame, the services, the seams. It’s all part of the architecture." On domestic radicalism: "This house doesn’t impose. It suggests. It proposes a new way to live." On flexibility: "Architecture here isn’t fixed. It’s responsive, adaptable, alive." Website: www.jameshamiltonarchitects.com Instagram: @jameshamiltonarchitects Podcast Production: OneFinePlay