AS A YOUNG CHILD, DESIGNER FRANCIS SULTANA borrowed architecture books from the public library in his hometown, the Maltese island of Gozo, and pored over them, copying designs he particularly liked into his notebook. As a design-obsessed nine-year-old, he came across an article on renowned designer David Hicks, who had his home in Albany, London. Albany was London’s first apartment building, built in 1770 close to Piccadilly and the Royal Academy of Arts, and was converted into sets of rooms for bachelors in 1802. A fan of Hicks’ work, Sultana loved the idea of living in this historic, Georgian building and making one of the apartments – or sets, as they are traditionally called – his own.
Sultana travelled to London as a 19-year-old and, with a folder of drawings…
