Project Facts
Location
Toronto, ON
Status
Completed 2006
Size
11,600 Sq. Ft.
Partner
Located within a large ravine system in a North Toronto neighbourhood, this family residence’s form and spatial configuration relate directly to qualities found on site. The 11,600 square foot home establishes a dialogue between street and wooded valley, articulated through a play of light, volume, and material. Crafted in limestone and roughcast stucco, the exterior fits the neighbourhood’s character. The solid mass of the slightly curved façade presents a subdued and private face to the street. As one moves through the interior, the large windows open the house to the ravine, creating a feeling of spaciousness and the sense that the backyard is a tree-walled room. Structural steel framing, with chimneys used as lateral bracing, allow for expansive interiors.
Carefully placed windows enhance views and maximize light. A consistent palette of limestone and walnut flooring flows through the space and creates a feeling of sophisticated comfort. In keeping with the home’s relationship with nature, the building process was carefully managed to minimize damage to the surrounding habitat, reduce construction waste, and reuse materials. The completed design achieves the client’s desire to create an enduring generational home, and in so doing, evokes a sense of permanence. The residence received the 2010 Tucker Design Award’s Building Stone Institute Award of Excellence.
Project Facts
Location
Toronto, ON
Status
Completed 2006
Size
11,600 Sq. Ft.
Partner
Select Awards
2010 – Building Stone Institute Tucker Design Award
The L-shaped residence employs two volumes with carefully choreographed openings, each addressing the public street while preserving domestic privacy. The rear of the house takes advantage of the picturesque ravine landscape by maximizing the flow of natural light into the space, and providing stunning landscape views.
The L-shaped residence employs two volumes with carefully choreographed openings, each addressing the public street while preserving domestic privacy. The rear of the house takes advantage of the picturesque ravine landscape by maximizing the flow of natural light into the space, and providing stunning landscape views.
Employing a vocabulary of enduring materials of French limestone, roughcast stucco, and teak windows and doors, the house underscores the client’s desire to create a generational home.
Employing a vocabulary of enduring materials of French limestone, roughcast stucco, and teak windows and doors, the house underscores the client’s desire to create a generational home.
"[...] every single day we enjoy the house. We enjoy the home. We enjoy the design. Siamak loves to remind us of the different moments that we would experience in the house, and every day we enjoy the moments. [...] We love coming home, we enjoy being here and it’s a beautiful house."
—David Meyerowitz
"[...] every single day we enjoy the house. We enjoy the home. We enjoy the design. Siamak loves to remind us of the different moments that we would experience in the house, and every day we enjoy the moments. [...] We love coming home, we enjoy being here and it’s a beautiful house."
—David Meyerowitz
Select Awards
2010 – Building Stone Institute Tucker Design Award