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Great Lake Studio makes space for family interaction and privacy in an inventive Etobicoke home rebuild

It’s a major challenge to craft a multi-generational home for seven people that ticks all the boxes. Armed with a detailed wish list, Great Lake Studio, led by Rick Galezowski designed an efficient layout within a small footprint that did just that, giving the family a warm and calm environment with connections to the outdoors, with a unique architectural expression, to boot.The exterior is modern in form, yet characterful with cladding made of charred and oiled cedar. “It’s a nice neighbour and quiet non-conformist,” says Galezowski of the Etobicoke home that replaced the original bungalow on the lot. We chatted with Great Lake Studio about his process.

Great West Lake
Great West Lake

Catherine MacIntosh: What was on this family’s wish list?

Rick Galezowski: The most consequential requirement was that this would be a home for a family of five, including three school-age kids, plus a live-in suite for grandparents. One of my principal objectives with any home design is to explore ways of enhancing and enriching family life. Many of our projects involve interconnecting the various regions of a home in interesting ways, always with a view to bringing the family together. On the other hand, with three generations living under one roof, there is a lot of potential for chaos! So, the idea was to provide the most calming environment possible with plenty of options for solitude and escape.

Wedgewood Park
Wedgewood Park

Great Lake Studio included a wide covered front porch in its full-scale design of this new home in Etobicoke. The marble slab is a leftover from the kitchen backsplash, picking up on the grey elm outside.

CM: What was the vision or inspiration behind this form?

RG: The clients wanted a distinctly contemporary home that wouldn’t feel alien in its mild suburban surroundings. At first glance, it reflects the general massing and pitched-roof vernacular of its neighbours. Its spare composition of simple geometric forms reflects the efficient and rigorous planning of spaces contained within.

Great Lake Studio
Great Lake Studio

A fireplace is uniquely situated at the front of the house to warm guests as they arrive and create a welcoming environment that can be seen from the outside through the expansive window.

CM: I believed the house replaced a bungalow. Was it a challenge fitting it in with the neighbourhood?

RG: The house did replace a small bungalow. We repurposed the existing basement, which was a budget-saver and made good practical sense, but this limited the overall building footprint, and made planning the lifestyle needs of a large, extended family rather challenging. The solution lay in two highly contrasted approaches to the lower and upper levels.

Great Lake Studio

A custom harvest table crafted by Gibson Greenwood is a central gathering spot in the home with all common living areas pivoting around it.

Wedgewood Park

Natural light floods the kitchen.

Etobicoke home

Beautiful continuous millwork frames the area to create a cozy ambience.

CM: How are the two floors split up?

RG: The family gathers on the ground floor, which is open and sprawling with an emphasis on fluid movement from the front entrance through the main living spaces, and outside into a back garden. Living, dining and kitchen areas are loosely differentiated by long arms of custom oak cabinetry. They open to one another, but still feel comfortably contained and intimate. Tucked away out of sight is a private live-in suite that keeps elderly in-laws close to the common areas without having to use stairs.

Great Lake Studio

Great Lake Studio tended to every detail of the Etobicoke home from the architecture to the furniture selection in this Etobicoke home.

Etobicoke home

The high-contrast staircase plays off the white wooden screen creating dramatic light and shadow.

Upstairs of the home.

CM: And upstairs?

RG: In contrast to the open, horizontal orientation of the ground floor, the upper level is oriented vertically toward the sky and heavily compartmentalized with four bedrooms, three bathrooms, a study, and a family room. Spaces are compact but feel spacious thanks to the soaring vaulted ceilings and daylighting from skylights.

Great Lake Studio
Great Lake Studio

The design allowed for three full bathrooms, each carrying the same finishes from the main spaces for continuity and a visually calm environment.

CM: How did you land on the material and colour palettes used here?

RG: We arrived at a fairly restrained material palette, which is applied consistently throughout the home. This creates a calm and harmonious background that can better withstand (and not be overwhelmed by) the chaos and clutter of family life. The main components are grey elm cabinetry throughout, white oak floors, and grey quartz counters in the kitchen, bathrooms and living areas.

Etobicoke home
Etobicoke home

The folded roof slopes steeply toward the back, sheltering a series of private outdoor spaces with deep eaves. The stepped levels create ample conversation zones and create an amphitheatre experience.

CM:  Are there any special features or considerations we might not see immediately?

RG: The Etobicoke home is working hard to do many things at once. It’s like a complex puzzle where each piece is contributing. There are no inefficiencies or wasted spaces. A lot of work is required to achieve that result, but because the pieces fit together seamlessly, it looks effortless. What you see is a calming and durable backdrop for the chaos of family life.

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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.

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