Services & Offers
If you’re curious, creative, and ready to see your home (and yourself) in a whole new light—pull up a chair - You’re in the right place!
A Journey Into the Psychology of Your Home
First of the Six Blind Spots — The Dead Layout
Rooms sealed off from each other. A kitchen tucked away at the back. Hallways that eat floor space and give nothing back. This layout made sense in 1952. Today it creates a home where everyone coexists in separate boxes, the cook is always isolated, and the space never quite breathes. More than 40% of a traditional floor plan is often corridor or transitional space you move through but never actually live in.
This is where most projects begin — and where the most significant change happens.
Before talking about what to build, let’s look at what’s actually not working and why. Most homes have fixable problems that nobody has ever properly diagnosed. A layout that causes friction. A room that nobody wants to be in. Light that arrives in the wrong place at the wrong time of day. A flow that subtly exhausts everyone who lives there.
Using design psychology, spatial analysis, and principles drawn from Vastu Shastra, I look at your home as a complete system — not a collection of separate rooms to be updated one at a time. The result is a clear picture of what’s genuinely wrong, what’s salvageable, and what needs to change.
Who this is for: Anyone whose home feels like it’s working against them. Anyone considering an extension who wants to be sure it will genuinely improve how they live. Anyone who’s inherited or bought an older home and can feel its limitations without being able to name them.
Layout redesign · Extensions · Conversions · Repurposing
Smart Storage & Custom Furniture
Mass-produced furniture is designed to fit most homes adequately and no home perfectly. Bespoke joinery is the opposite: designed around your specific space, your specific routines, and your specific way of living. The under-stair void that’s been accumulating random objects for a decade. The alcove that’s never had a purpose. The kitchen that almost works but never quite does.
Custom furniture and storage transforms these from problem areas into some of the most satisfying parts of a home — functional, considered, and built to last.
Every piece includes consultation and survey, concept design and sketches tailored to your lifestyle, material and colour guidance, and detailed drawings for construction. We work with trusted makers to bring it seamlessly to life.
Who this is for: Anyone tired of furniture that almost fits. Anyone with awkward spaces that have never had a solution. Anyone ready to invest in something designed for them rather than for a catalogue.
02 — The Formal Room Trap [Six Blind Spots]
The dining room used four times a year. The guest bedroom that’s really a storage unit. The “good” living room nobody sits in. These spaces made sense when life was more performative. Now they’re just square footage that costs you money and gives nothing back. In over 60% of UK homes that have a formal dining room, it is used fewer than three times a week.
Clutter is not an organisational failure. It’s usually a design failure — a home without enough intelligent storage for the life being lived inside it.
Wardrobes · Kitchens · Workstations · Bespoke joinery
Property Development with Design at Its Core
03 — The Renovation That Forgot About Life [Six Blind Spots]
The safe, beige, personality-free flip. The kitchen update that photographs well and feels hollow. The average property renovation spends 78% of its budget on what’s most visible at viewings — while spatial flow and natural light, which have a far greater long-term impact on how people feel, get almost no attention at all.
This service starts with structure —
- with spatial intelligence, layout reconfiguration, and the kind of design thinking that turns an awkward Victorian terrace or a tired 1970s semi into something people genuinely want to live in. They’re the ones that feel most liveable — where the layout makes immediate sense, the light is right, the rooms have clear purpose, and the space feels generous even when it isn’t especially large.
I work with developers and landlords to maximise return on every square metre — not just aesthetically, but through smarter spatial decisions that increase usability, liveability, and market appeal. The result is properties that stand out, hold their value, and attract stronger offers.
Includes survey and feasibility study, layout concepts, planning application package where required, interior architecture guidance, and optional building regulations drawings.
Who this is for: Developers wanting to maximise ROI. Landlords aiming for stronger yields. Investors with dated or inherited properties ready to unlock their real potential.
For developers · landlords · investors
Home Styling for Wellbeing — DIY Packages
Sometimes what’s needed is a clear framework, a better understanding of why certain spaces feel wrong, and the confidence to make changes yourself — with professional knowledge behind every decision.
These self-guided packages give you exactly that. You’ll understand how colour wavelengths affect your nervous system (and what this means for each room in your home). How texture and material choice influence how calm or stimulated you feel. How to zone a room so that different activities feel genuinely distinct without physical separation. How to arrange furniture so that a space flows rather than clutters.
This is design psychology, made practical. It’s the knowledge that takes years to accumulate — delivered in a format you can actually use.
Packages include a tailored style and wellbeing guide for your home, insight into how colour, texture, and layout affect mood and energy, practical layout suggestions, and clear direction to avoid expensive mistakes.
Who this is for: Anyone who wants to improve how their home feels without a full redesign. Anyone who’d rather understand the principles than just follow instructions.
Flexible pricing — ask for a full breakdown.
04 — The Home That Doesn’t Feel Like Yours [Six Blind Spots]
Inherited aesthetic. A previous owner’s layout decisions. Rooms that carry someone else’s era, taste, and emotional history. Research in environmental psychology shows that personalisation of living space is directly linked to reported wellbeing and sense of identity. A home that doesn’t reflect who you are isn’t just uncomfortable — it’s a low-level stressor every single day.
Not every home improvement requires an architect.
Colour · texture · layout · design psychology, in your hands
Outdoor Living
05 — The Garden Nobody Uses [Six Blind Spots]
UK gardens cover a combined area larger than all the country’s nature reserves. The majority are used fewer than 40 days a year. This is not a weather problem — it’s a design problem. An outdoor space without purpose, shelter, or intelligent layout will always be underused, regardless of what the sun is doing.
The garden is the most underused room in most homes. Not because people don’t want to use it — but because it was never properly designed to be used.
An outdoor space without purpose, shelter, clear zoning, and considered material choice will be uncomfortable for most of the year, regardless of the UK weather. An outdoor space designed with the same intelligence as any interior room becomes one of the most loved parts of the home — usable year-round, naturally extending the living space, and worth far more to buyers than its construction cost.
I design outdoor spaces as genuine extensions of the home: outdoor kitchens and dining shelters, garden studios and creative pods, bath and shower areas, pergolas and entrance canopies, and play spaces designed with real intention. Every project includes year-round activity planning, clear spatial zoning, furniture concepts, and optional detailed construction drawings.
Who this is for: Anyone whose garden is beautiful in theory and unused in practice. Anyone who wants to genuinely extend their home without building an extension.
Several packages available depending on scale — full breakdown on request.
Gardens · patios · studios · outdoor kitchens · year-round usability
Property Development with Design at Its Core
The home office became a necessity for millions of people almost overnight. Most homes weren’t ready. A kitchen table, a bedroom corner, a makeshift desk in a spare room — these aren’t working environments. They’re compromises that cost focus, energy, and the clear boundary between work and rest that the brain genuinely needs.
Children’s rooms have the same challenge in reverse: spaces that need to support play, creativity, sleep, and learning — often in a single small room, across years of rapid change.
I design creative spaces that actually work: home offices with the right spatial psychology for focus, children’s rooms that grow with the child rather than against them, and studio or creative spaces tailored to the specific kind of work being done in them.
Who this is for: Anyone working from home in a space that’s compromising their output. Families whose children need rooms that support how they actually develop.
06 — The Home That Wasn’t Built for Work [Six Blind Spots]
Before 2020, fewer than 15% of UK homes had a dedicated workspace. Then overnight, 57% of the population started working from them. The average person working from home loses 86 minutes a day to distractions caused by poor spatial design. And 68% can’t mentally switch off from work — because there’s no physical boundary telling the brain it’s allowed to.
The brain needs spatial permission to focus — and spatial permission to stop. Most homes give it neither.
For developers · landlords · investors
Bespoke Granny Annexe
07 — The Most Valuable Space You Haven’t Built Yet [Six Blind Spots]
A well-designed annexe adds more value to a property than a traditional extension — at a fraction of the disruption. It generates rental income, accommodates family, and future-proofs how you live. Most are still being built as afterthoughts.
The difference between an annexe that works and an expensive shed with plumbing is decided entirely at the design stage.
One of the most intelligent investments a homeowner can make — and one of the most underused options available. A well-designed annexe adds genuine value in multiple directions simultaneously: it creates independent living space for family members, generates rental income, provides a guest suite that functions like a self-contained home, or offers a studio or creative space with genuine separation from the main house.
Designed well, an annexe doesn’t feel like an afterthought — it feels like a considered extension of how a family wants to live, now and in the future. Designed poorly, it’s an expensive shed.
Who this is for: Anyone looking for flexible, future-proof space that adds value without compromise. Families considering multi-generational living. Anyone with an outbuilding or large garden plot that’s doing nothing.
Independent living · guest suites · rental income · future-proof flexibility
Not sure where to start?
Most people aren’t. The right place to begin is a conversation — not a brief, not a budget, just an honest look at what isn’t working and what you’d like your home to feel like.
The Conscious Home Consultation — £250
One consultation. Your home, your life, your specific problems. You’ll leave with a clear picture of what’s possible and a tailored report to move forward with.