Friday, May 15, 2026 | AboutContact
Vol. XVII No. 143
May 15 · 2026
AllWorldPoliticsBusinessCultureScienceDesignLifestyleSportOpinionTravelFoodFashionTech
● Breaking Top Stories Exclusive In-Depth Analysis Video Podcast Newsletter ★ GET THIS THEME
Luxurious Four-Bedroom Retreat With Roman Stone Bath House Wins Architectural Praise

Photograph: Alexandra Reid / The Herald

Design

Luxurious Four-Bedroom Retreat With Roman Stone Bath House Wins Architectural Praise

A new private residence draws on ancient thermal bathing traditions to create a contemporary sanctuary.

⏱ 1 min read

The house has been described as the most accomplished private residence completed in Britain this year. Its clients prefer to describe it as a place where they actually want to spend time.

The building is organised around a central bathhouse — a sequence of spaces for hot immersion, cold plunge, steam and rest, built from Travertine limestone and handmade tile — that draws on ancient Roman thermal bathing traditions.

“The Romans understood something we have largely forgotten,” says the architect. “That bathing is not hygiene. It is ritual. It separates the part of the day that is work from the part that is life.”

Alexandra Reid
Written by

Senior Design Correspondent. Covers architecture and urban design from London.

Related Stories

Basic Design Principles That Transform Even the Smallest Home Office

The difference between a home office that supports good work and one that undermines it is not a question of…

By Alexandra Reid  ·  May 3, 2026  ·  1 min read

Interior Design Tips: Celebrating the Great Outdoors Inside Your Home

Bringing the qualities of natural spaces into interiors requires understanding why we respond to them.

By Alexandra Reid  ·  May 6, 2026  ·  1 min read

Inside the Firm Redesigning Britain’s High Streets From the Ground Up

A small practice is winning commissions through radical reuse and community co-design.

By Alexandra Reid  ·  May 11, 2026  ·  1 min read

Scandinavian Boho Three-Bed in Warm Neutral Tones Named Home of the Year

The prize-winning house is an argument for a certain kind of human scale in domestic architecture.

By Alexandra Reid  ·  May 3, 2026  ·  1 min read

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Get unlimited access to Herald Premium — all stories, all archives
GET THIS THEME