Episodes

  • Kevin McCloud: the Grand Designs presenter takes us behind the scenes of his own life
    Aug 1 2024

    Kevin has been a fixture on our tellies for so many years that we feel like we know him. But, actually, I didn’t have a clue about his life story, so this conversation was really interesting for me. He tells me about growing up in what he refers to as an ‘architectural zoo’ of housing from different eras. We talk about his involvement with Footlights, the famous comedy troupe at Cambridge University, where he collaborated with Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie and Emma Thompson. And he explains why he’s spent years living in a camper van and why his future home will definitely have a view of the mountains. Kevin is one of the most engaging and fiercely intelligent guests I’ve spoken to on Homing In and he’s full of amusing anecdotes and top tips. I hope you enjoy the episode!


    This episode was recorded in person at St Anne's Court, a home currently for sale on The Modern House.


    For more:


    Watch Grand Designs

    Subscribe to The Modern House newsletter for weekly interiors inspiration

    Find out more about Matt Gibberd’s latest book, A Modern Way To Live


    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Editing and mixing: Oscar Crawford

    Graphic Design: Tom Young

    Music: Father


    This episode is sponsored by Vitsoe.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    51 mins
  • Ruth Rogers: London’s favourite chef on creating an iconic house
    Jul 25 2024

    For Ruth Rogers, home is at the very heart of everything. Her legendary London restaurant, the River Cafe, is founded on community, friendship and home cooking. Her iconic house in Chelsea, which she co-created with her architect husband, Richard Rogers, has been the backdrop to family life for forty years and has influenced a generation of homeowners to live with light and space. Ruthie invited me in to discuss her extraordinary life through the lens of the homes she has lived in. She describes with great poignancy how her house provides her with comfort following Richard’s death. She talks about growing up in the Borscht Belt near New York, and a chance encounter with Bob Dylan in Woodstock. Having personally co-founded a business in an industry I knew nothing about, I can relate to Ruthie’s inspiring story of starting the River Cafe with no restaurant experience and making things up as she went along. She tells me about how the restaurant has become a home from home, and why it’s been a breeding ground for some of the world’s most celebrated chefs, including Jamie Oliver, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, April Bloomfield and Allegra McEvedy. She talks about the influences behind her Chelsea home, from the Maison de Verre in Paris to the Italian piazzas of Pienza and Montepulciano, and why a rather special set of coloured pencils is one of the first things she would save in a house fire.


    This conversation was recorded in person at Ruth Rogers’ home in Chelsea, London.


    For more on Ruth Rogers:

    Watch our film at the home of Ruth and Richard Rogers

    Visit the River Café

    Listen to Ruth’s podcast, Ruthie’s Table Four


    For more from Matt Gibberd and The Modern House:

    Sign up to our newsletter for weekly interior inspiration

    Subscribe to our YouTube channel

    Follow us on Instagram

    Check out Matt's latest book, A Modern Way To Live


    Executive Producer: Kate Taylor of Feast Collective

    Production: Hannah Phillips

    Music: Father

    Graphic Design: Tom Young


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    45 mins
  • Mary Portas: the queen of the high street’s inspiring journey from homeless orphan to a London townhouse that’s all hers
    Jul 18 2024

    Most of us know Mary Portas as a swashbuckling TV presenter with a flame-red bob, but her career away from the screen has been no less remarkable. She did the window displays for Topshop during its heyday and was the creative director of Harvey Nichols when it was immortalised on Absolutely Fabulous. Nowadays, however, she runs her consultancy, Portas, which helps brands create purpose and beauty in everything they do. As this episode reveals, her life story is incredibly rich and filled with both trauma and triumph.


    This episode was recorded in person at the Portas offices, London.


    For more:


    Head over to our website for more images of the places discussed

    Visit Portas

    Sign up to The Modern House newsletter for weekly interiors inspiration

    Check out Matt Gibberd’s latest book, A Modern Way To Live


    This episode is sponsored by Vitsoe.


    Executive Producer: Kate Taylor of Feast Collective

    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Music: Father

    Graphic Design: Tom Young


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    53 mins
  • Cath Kidston: the floral-obsessed entrepreneur on why life isn’t always a bed of roses
    Jul 5 2024

    There’s barely an oilcloth, mug or ironing board cover that hasn’t been embellished with a nostalgic floral print from Cath Kidston. Because of the brand’s ubiquity, it’s easy to forget quite how influential it was when it appeared in the 1990s.


    What I love about Cath is that she’s living proof you can be a wildly successful entrepreneur whilst also being a kind, gentle soul. Although her name’s still above the door, she hasn’t been involved with the Cath Kidston business for many years, so I was intrigued to find out what that feels like.


    She’s now set up a bodycare brand called C. Atherley, which makes all of its products using scented geraniums. Despite her love of flowers, life hasn’t always been a bed of David Austin roses for Cath and she talks very honestly about the personal grief she’s suffered through her life.


    She has a great eye for interiors and we had this conversation at her kitchen table in London, with a surprisingly modern backdrop of Danish wood flooring and an Ellsworth Kelly artwork.


    Cath was very generous with her time and emotions and I’m really happy with how this episode has turned out. I hope you enjoy it.


    This episode was recorded in person at Cath Kidston’s West London home.


    For more:

    Visit The Modern House website to see images of the spaces discussed in this episode

    Check out Cath Kidston’s latest venture, C.Atherley


    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Editing: Oscar Crawford

    Graphic Design: Tom Young

    Music: Father


    This episode was sponsored by Vitsoe.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Jonny Gent: music, martinis and mayhem from the founder of Sessions Arts Club
    Jun 28 2024

    Today I’m chatting to the swashbuckling artist and restaurateur Jonny Gent. We recorded this episode during a busy lunch service at Sessions Arts Club, Jonny’s inspirational restaurant in Clerkenwell. It’s fair to say that he’d emboldened himself with a few martinis beforehand and what ensued was a conversation that very much represents the man himself: unstructured, poetic and generous.


    Jonny’s a brilliant painter, and his artworks range from the sexualised and salacious to tenderly painted still-lifes that are a tribute to his late mother. After getting himself through art school, he met a casting director who wrote him a cheque for every painting he’d made. What followed was a journey that took him to more than 20 countries around the world, establishing art studios in everything from a cabin in Scotland to a tobacco factory in France.


    Now approaching his late 40s, he’s finally starting to put down some roots. As well as having a permanent home in London, Jonny spends a lot of time in the Scottish Highlands, where he’s opened a retreat for creatives called Boath House. Like Sessions Arts Club, it explores the confluence of art, food and music.


    Jonny says of his childhood, “I felt totally alone in what I found beautiful.” He begins by telling me about the Slow & Easy, the pub he grew up in, and the lasting impact of 500 strangers coming into your home every day. I hope you enjoy it!


    This episode was recorded in person at Sessions Arts Club, London.


    For more:


    Visit The Modern House website to see images of the spaces discussed in this episode

    Check out Sessions Arts Club and Boath House

    Take a look at Jonny Gent’s latest work


    Producer and Editor: Hannah Phillips

    Mixing: Oscar Crawford

    Graphic Design: Tom Young

    Music: Father


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr
  • Tim Ross: the Australian comedian on the life-changing effect of modest, modernist buildings – and tinted moisturiser
    Jun 21 2024

    A while back, Tim came to London to perform at the Isokon building in Belsize Park, and I managed to catch up with him to record this podcast.


    As a small boy in the Seventies, Tim quietly absorbed the lessons of modernist architecture. He remembers accompanying his parents to a dinner party at a modern house, where the sound of laughter reverberated around the circular lounge; his career seems to have been about trying to recapture that heady moment.


    In 2003, he bought his own modernist house in Sydney, a move which, he says, ‘changed my life for the better’. His fascination with architecture and design had previously been a solitary pursuit, but the house provided a way to meet like-minded people and a launchpad for his TV career.


    Tim is really great company, and we talk about all sorts of things. He explains how he’s an outlier in his family, and what it felt like to perform on stage for the first time.


    He tells me about the day the Beastie Boys came to visit and wouldn’t leave, why he’d rather learn to be a builder than go through the stress of another renovation project, and why he swears by the uplifting effects of tinted moisturiser.


    This episode was recorded in person in Brick Lane, London.


    For more:

    Visit The Modern House website to see images of the spaces discussed in this episode

    Discover more about Tim Ross and his live shows

    See more of his Sydney home


    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Editing: Oscar Crawford

    Graphic Design: Tom Young and Ben Tucker

    Music: Father



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 13 mins
  • Luke Edward hall: the artist and designer pulls back the curtain to reveal his colourful life story
    Jun 7 2024

    Luke has kindly invited us to his house in the Cotswolds, which he shares with his husband, Duncan Campbell, and a pair of enthusiastic whippets.


    I was intrigued to learn that this modern-day dandy comes from a bog-standard commuter town, and like many of the people I talk to on this podcast, his creative impulses offered a route out of mediocrity.


    He tells me his very personal backstory of being estranged from his father at a young age, and what it was like to come out as gay to his family.


    We talk about his witty, whimsical interpretation of the English Country House Style, why he believes you should invest yourself financially and emotionally in a rental, and why he chose to paint his London flat in ‘Pepto-Bismol pink’ before getting rid of it a few days later.


    This episode was recorded in person at Luke’s cottage in the Cotswolds.


    For more:

    Check out the work of Luke Edward Hall

    See images of the home he shares with Duncan Campbell over on our sister website, Inigo

    Visit The Modern House website


    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Editing: Oscar Crawford

    Graphic Design: Tom Young and Ben Tucker

    Music: Father


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • James Lohan: the co-founder of Mr & Mrs Smith on how his first experience of home shaped an obsession with boutique hotels
    May 24 2024

    This is the first time we’ve recorded an episode in a hotel suite, and that’s because today’s guest knows more about opening doors to glamorous guesthouses than anyone else.


    James Lohan co-founded the travel company Mr & Mrs Smith with his wife Tamara back in 2003, and since then he’s visited nearly 4,000 hotels in the name of research.


    James is a gregarious character with some brilliant tales to tell.We discuss his earliest experiences as an entrepreneur, from selling cheese toasties at school, to setting up a mobile disco called Your Mother Wouldn’t Like It.


    He tells me about his refurbishment of a Dutch barge on the Thames – complete with flock wallpaper and a freestanding bath – and what he’s learned from hotels that we might apply to our homes.


    This episode was recorded in person at The Nomad Hotel, London.


    For more:

    Check out Mr & Mrs Smith

    Visit The Modern House website


    Producer: Hannah Phillips

    Editing and mixing: Oscar Crawford

    Music: Father

    Graphic Design: Tom Young and Ben Tucker


    This episode was sponsored by Vitsoe.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 7 mins