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Images: Jim Stephenson

Inside McLean Quinlan’s Winchester architecture studio: a material-led approach to designing contemporary homes

February 24, 2026 by Katharina Geissler-Evans in Lifestyle

For over 40 years, McLean Quinlan has been creating distinct, beautifully crafted homes and retreats — in towns, in the countryside, across the UK and overseas. A family of architects working from studios in London and Winchester, the practice carefully attends to a select number of projects, led by a close-knit team of architects and designers supported by a trusted network of craftspeople and specialists.

Recognised for their ability to curate warmth, texture, scale and atmospheric light, McLean Quinlan designs spaces with a unique and tangible character. Natural materials and traditional processes are used in highly crafted, contemporary ways. Detail matters. The sensory matters. The tactile matters. Their award-winning buildings are designed to endure — and to inspire beyond a lifetime.

It is this philosophy that now finds physical expression in their newly completed Winchester studio.

A Studio Designed to Demystify the Architectural Process

Beneath the practice’s existing Winchester office, the ground floor has been transformed into a welcoming architectural studio. Rather than functioning as a formal showroom or corporate meeting room, the space has been conceived as something more intimate — a relaxed, domestic environment that grounds the design journey in lived experience.

The aim is simple yet powerful: to demystify architecture.

Here, clients don’t just discuss materials — they touch them. They don’t simply imagine atmosphere — they sit within it.

The studio is accessible through two entrances. An internal door allows the team to use the space for meetings, shared lunches and focused work away from the main office. A second landscaped street entrance welcomes clients directly into the experience.

From the road, stepping stones guide visitors through considered planting towards a raised, covered entryway. Brick paving, Millboard composite cladding and timber-framed glazing create a deliberately residential tone. A small bistro table and chairs soften the threshold, signalling from the outset that this is not a showroom — it is a space for conversation.

Where Materiality Takes Centre Stage

Inside, the studio unfolds in an open plan, gently zoned by furniture and bespoke joinery. A generous kitchen island replaces the traditional reception desk, anchoring the space in a familiar domestic gesture. It becomes a natural pause point for introductions and coffee before moving into the wider room.

At the heart of the space stands a substantial oak dining table, seating up to twenty people. It is both functional and symbolic — a place for collaboration, discussion and shared ideas. The studio can easily transition from hosting elegant evening events to intimate client meetings.

Soft clay plaster walls and warm timber finishes temper the scale of the room, ensuring that smaller conversations feel comfortable rather than cavernous.

A timber-panelled feature wall forms the studio’s evolving ‘project wall’. Here, curated palettes and mood boards from current residential projects are displayed. Instead of overwhelming clients with endless catalogues of samples, the wall presents harmonious, proven material combinations — inviting clarity rather than confusion.

Throughout the studio, every element has been chosen to demonstrate McLean Quinlan’s architectural aesthetic while functioning in daily life. From plaster walls and panelling to the kitchen island, oak table and seating, clients experience the very materials and detailing that may one day define their own home.

The space remains flexible — hosting evening gatherings, team workshops or simply offering a quieter retreat from the main office. Yet at its core, the studio exists to make architecture tangible. Warmth, materiality and attention to detail — the defining qualities of a McLean Quinlan home — are immediately legible.

As Emily Johnson, Senior Architect at McLean Quinlan, explains:

“We wanted to create a familiar space where the conversation about design feels natural and intuitive. When clients can sit at a table we would specify for their own home, or run a hand along a timber wall that could feature in their project, it demystifies the process. They experience the quality and aesthetic firsthand, which makes decisions less intimidating and the entire creative journey more collaborative and exciting.”

In grounding architectural design in sensory experience, McLean Quinlan reminds us that homes are not abstract concepts. They are lived spaces — shaped by light, material and atmosphere — and best understood not only through drawings, but through feeling.

The directors of McLean Quinlan: Kate Quinlan, Fiona McLean and Alastair Bowden

February 24, 2026 /Katharina Geissler-Evans
british architecture, creative studio
Lifestyle
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