Skip to Main Content
Advertisement

These Prefab Buildings are Perfect for the Work-From-Home Future

Advertisement

MacroSpace, by Denegri Bessai and friends, develops prefab home office sheds – sustainably built, beautifully kitted-out ones – the smallest of which requires no permit

As the spring season gets underway, the backyard offers an urban respite from the pandemic blahs. And if you live in a crowded or multi-gen home, carving out another spot for yourself away from the fam might just preserve your sanity. Bringing these needs together under one roof is MacroSpace, a new company making prefab home office sheds. It’s run by landscape designer Shanly Arnett, film and television production designer Elisa Sauvé and architect Maria Denegri of Toronto architecture firm Denegri Bessai. Equipped with electrical and ethernet, their insulated enclosures range from a 9-square-metre cube (which is small enough that it requires no building permit) that could house an office or a gym set-up to a 28-square-metre, sloped-roof structure that would make a killer poolhouse.

prefab home office shed

Denegri and her partner, Tom Bessai, who helped develop the MacroSpace concept, certainly had the chops from the get-go. “We know how to leverage small spaces,” says Bessai. “We made sure that the ceiling heights are really high – nine feet – so that the buildings are small but majestic.” Both teachers of digital fabrication at U of T Daniels, they built their own prototyping lab as part of their architectural practice. With their collaborators, they’ve long been thinking about launching a backyard building company – but it was the pandemic that truly stoked the demand: having created three already, their startup has five more commissions underway.

prefab home office shed - MacroSpace

While they’re not especially cheap – the smallest starts at $44,000 – their appeal is obvious: The prefab buildings are crafted offsite, reducing intrusive construction noise and mess. They’re modular – with a standard material palette – but can be customized to your whims. (One client commissioned a version clad in mirrored stainless steel; assembled on a wooded site, it’s camouflaged by the reflected forest). And they rest lightly, too: the floor hovers over the ground on corner posts that are dug into the soil. Plus, the interior finishes, including birch plywood paneling, are locally and sustainably sourced. Delivering the entire package, the team is also able to provide landscaping services and interior design, including beautiful millwork, to complete the backyard haven. MACROSPACE.CA; DENEGRIBESSAISTUDIO.COM

Advertisement
Advertisement

Town and country converge at this ultra-stylish country inn

Many city dwellers talk about moving to the country to start a B&B, or some other pastoral dream, but few actually do. During the pandemic, Michael von Teichman and Alex Portman did just that, chasing their dreams to The Eddie—an 1860s Loyalist manor house turned hotel set on 78 acres in prime Prince Edward County. Only a 2.5 hour drive from downtown Toronto, it’s a destination that’s easy to say yes to.

Advertisement

Newsletter

Your Weekly Dose of Modern Design

Sign up for the Designlines weekly newsletter to keep up with the latest design news, trends and inspiring projects from across Toronto. Join our community and never miss a beat!

Please fill out your email address.

The Magazine

Get the Latest Issue

From a sprawling family home in Oakville to a coastal-inspired retreat north of the city, we present spaces created by architects and interior designers that redefine the contemporary.

Designlines 2024 Issue