

“The Murphy House is this year’s best example of how to overcome challenging constraints – from planning restrictions and an awkward site in an urban location - to build a stunning house,” RIBA President Jane Duncan said. “Nearly a decade in the making, this house is a true labour of love for Richard,” she added.

Located at the end of a Georgian terrace in Edinburgh’s historic city centre, the house is like a jigsaw puzzle with hidden spaces, moving pieces and folding walls. The judging panel for the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) award complimented the building’s quirky features, which include a folding corner wall and sliding bookshelf ladders.

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The house also has a ‘hidden bath,’ which has a view out over the chimneys but cannot be seen by neighbours. “One lodger said it was like a Rubik’s cube, because as soon as you move one lever, everything moves. There are lots of moving gadgets, it’s not a prototype house,” Murphy told Channel 4.

Murphy explained that the unusual shape of the house was actually to ‘resolve’ the street layout. “My aim was to resolve a planning mess-up in the 1820s, which should never have happened. The shape of the house is to try to bookend the terrace that comes up the street,” he said.


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The futuristic house boasts a series of optical illusions that make the small 36 foot by 20 foot house appear bigger. “It seems a lot bigger than it actually is, and it’s very complex inside,” Murphy said.

This article originally appeared on Daily Mail.
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