Eglington W House in Toronto, Canada by StudioAC

21 Aug 2024

Located off a busy retail/commuter street in Toronto, this house was conceived as a simple architectural proposition: a box with one spatial gesture that attempts to enhance common social patterns in the public spaces of a home.

Exterior Photo credit: DoubleSpace Photography

Located off a busy retail/commuter street in Toronto, this house was conceived as a simple architectural proposition: a box with one spatial gesture that attempts to enhance common social patterns in the public spaces of a home.

Entry through the front of the house is modest and comprised of a small entry closet flanked by a reading lounge. This transitions to a flexible dining area. At this point, a spatial tangent funnels one's experience and eye towards the full width of the home. The space is centred around a sculptural island that, at first glance, presents a knife edge towards the viewer while it funnels towards the rear, producing an unfamiliar triangulated form.

This triangular form allows for a more integrated and multi-faceted social interaction between inhabitants. The three sides of the island, one for sitting, watching, and cooking, allow users to interact simultaneously. This same sculptural element has a fourth function not initially observed: when users ascend into the living room via a few steps to the island, a piece of furniture becomes a wall, like a piece of architecture that defines and humanizes the open floor plan. Once seated your sense of space is altered and you feel comforted by the object in front of you.

The simplicity and singularity of the project was furthered through material selection and application. Consistency of the material approach, from the exterior through to the most private of spaces, maintains the simplicity and calmness of the home. Large openings in the façade provide ample natural light and are often flanked by opaque operable panels to provide fresh air when desired.

 

Technical sheet

  • Completion: 2020
  • Architect: StudioAC 
  • StudioAC Team: Jonathan Miura, Jennifer Kudlats, Andrew Hill
  • Structural engineering: Blackwell 
  • Construction management: SteinRegency
  • Photos: Doublespace Photography