Tigh Mojo
Caheratrant, Co. Kerry

Planning Granted 2026
In Construction
A 1990s beachfront bungalow is reworked through the addition of a single-storey extension, configured as a pair of interlocking mono-pitched volumes. The removal of an incongruous hexagonal conservatory rationalises the plan, redefines the building edge, and establishes a clearer datum in relation to the horizon.

The roofscape comprises two shallow, curving zinc-clad forms, their shell-like geometry catching the shifting coastal light and introducing a subtle sense of movement. The structure is set on a limestone plinth, profiled and detailed to register as a continuous stereotomic base. Its material behaviour is integral to the composition: the stone darkens under moisture, acquiring a surface sheen, and will weather progressively, reinforcing the building’s relationship to site. The resulting tectonic hierarchy: base, rendered wall, and metal roof articulates a language rooted in permanence and endurance.

Internally, the principal living space rises westwards towards the mountains and the setting sun, its ceiling plane lifting to draw the eye outward, framing sea, sky, and land as integral elements of the everyday interior experience rather than a distant backdrop.

Filed under:
BungalowRenovation, Extension

An Tigín
Castlegregory, Co. Kerry

Planning Granted 2025
In Construction
A 1970s  bungalow, nestled in a woodland by the sea on the Dingle Peninsula, will be transformed into a contemporary family home after lying dormant for over twenty years.

Kissing gables will define an entrance arcade, enhancing the sense of arrival from the north-east, while to the rear a south-facing courtyard will maximise solar gain, encourage passive ventilation, and improve outdoor amenity. The inward-facing typology defined by asymmetric gables will reflect the spatial composition and form typical of vernacular farm clusters, shaped by the need for collective shelter from prevailing Atlantic winds and a strong sense of enclosure.


To reduce demolition and construction waste, the original wet-dash rendered walls will be retained and repaired, preserving the understated, utilitarian character of the existing structure. A series of vaulted spaces will then be carefully grafted-on, with the junction between old and new celebrated through a change in surface texture. This horizontal datum—the moment where old and new are fused—will act as a chalk line, defining where openings will sit, rooflines will terminate, and gutters will extend, visually stitching the composition together while highlighting the dialogue between the original and the proposed.
Filed under:
Bungalow, Renovation, Extension


Dick Mack’s Pub
Dingle, Co. Kerry

2022–2023
Dick Mack’s Pub sought a sensitive reconfiguration and extension of its ‘back bar’ area. A new bar, additional seating, and upgraded toilet facilities were added. The brief was simple: honour the distinctive character of the historic front bar without imitation, establishing a complementary identity for the rear spaces that avoids pastiche.

The new layout and material palette take cues from the historic front bar, reinterpreted with subtle variation. Timber, used both pragmatically and expressively, becomes the unifying element throughout. It lines the walls to soften acoustics and introduce warmth and texture, while forming the fixed furniture: the bar counter, bar shelving, seating, doors and snugs. Existing routes through the pub were retained, and new ones were introduced to strengthen spatial and visual connections between adjoining rooms.


A key design move is the use of repetition as ornament. Along new walls, a veil of evenly spaced, CNC-machined solid oak battens wraps the interior like a continuous ribbon, aligned at a fixed datum. Below bar counter height, the battens remain square, flat and robust; above, they are scalloped, creating a shifting interplay of light and shadow. Doors puncture, while fluted glass partitions in the snugs provide softly diffused thresholds defining more intimate spaces.

Oak was chosen for its tactile warmth, longevity, and deeper cultural symbolism—long associated in Irish mythology with strength, wisdom, and resilience.

Other interventions reveal and celebrate the structure’s layered history. A thick layer of sand and cement render was deliberately removed from internal stone walls celebrate the original fabric. Construction idiosyncrasies were embraced: a lintel formed from a piece of the Dingle railway track was exposed, and original brick reveals, were preserved and sensitively restored.

To the rear, a single-storey extension replaces a former lean-to, creating a new room that opens onto the south-facing yard with views toward Dick Mack’s Brewery. Clad in locally sourced recycled stone, the extension responds directly to the exposed stone interiors and draws on the scale, materiality, and proportions of the pub’s Victorian-era fabric—ensuring the addition feels rooted, coherent, and respectful.






Morris+Company Studio
London Borough of Hackney
2020–2022
From 2017 to 2023, Luke Matone worked as a project architect at Morris+Company Architects, where he led the major refurbishment of a former warehouse in East London. The project transformed the existing structure into a multi-level, high-street-facing workspace that now serves as the practice’s own studio.

Conceived as a model for adaptive reuse, the design was grounded in principles of sustainability, flexibility, and circular construction. A focus on minimising embodied carbon drove the reuse of as much of the existing building fabric as possible — including salvaged glazed partitions, which were carefully re-integrated into a new modular wall system made from solid softwood timber.

This demountable timber partition — designed for future reconfiguration — also acts as a light-diffusing element, drawing natural light across the ground floor and encouraging visual connection with the street outside. Softwood, a low-carbon material, was chosen both for its renewability and simplicity, supporting the project’s ethos of honest, adaptable construction.

The basement houses a material archive, model workshop, photography studio, and ‘end-of-journey’ facilities — much of it constructed using repurposed joinery from previous studio fit-outs, extending the life of materials already in circulation.

On the first floor, a flexible open-plan studio accommodates 52 workstations, alongside meeting rooms, private call booths, and informal breakout areas — all designed to support a collaborative, future-proof working environment.











© Luke Matone MRIAI Architect 2026.
All Rights Reserved.
Tel: +353 (0)66 915 9728
Email: office (at) lukematone.com
Workshop & Studio: Ventry, Co. Kerry — coming soon!