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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Flipped House in Toronto, Canada by Atelier RZLBD

 
December 14th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: v2com

The product of a gut renovation and second-storey addition to an existing brick bungalow on the south-west edge of the Knob-Hill Park in a residential neighbourhood in Eglinton East on the border between Toronto and Scarborough, Flipped House is a two-storey property designed for a developer looking to offer real estate buyers a modern, turnkey home in a neighbourhood dominated by more traditional architecture.

Flipped House, main elevation, Image Courtesy © Borxu

  • Architects: Atelier RZLBD
  • Project: Flipped House
  • Location: Toronto, Canada
  • Photography: Borxu
  • Project team: Reza Aliabadi, Arman Azar
  • Structure: LHW Engineering Ltd.
  • HVAC: Monaro Engineering
  • Construction Management: HYZ Development & Construction Inc.
  • Lot: 5520 sqft / 513 m2
  • Living Area: 2300 sqft / 215 m2
  • Design: 2016
  • Completion: Fall 2017

Flipped House, main elevation, Image Courtesy © Borxu

The project gets its name from its unconventional “flipped” layout. While a typical dwelling keeps all public-facing spaces confined to its main floor, with private areas like bedrooms sequestered upstairs, Flipped House instead adopts a configuration that divides its public and private zones on either side of a vertical plane. As a result, the home’s den, kitchen, dining, and living rooms are all located on its street-facing northeast side, while the house’s three bedrooms span both levels of the building’s more secluded southwestern end.

Flipped House, main elevation, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Flipped House, main elevation, Image Courtesy © Borxu

The home’s varying ceiling heights work to communicate this symbolic dividing line. The linked first-floor kitchen and dining room are double-height spaces, with the ceiling then dropping down to single-storey height as one enters the hallway moving towards the residence’s more intimate back bedrooms. Knotty cedar slats surround the linked kitchen and dining room, wrapping up the side walls and onto the ceiling above to create a sense of warmth and grandiosity — a feeling further heightened by the two skylights that top this atrium. Passing under this wooden ceiling feature is the second floor’s bridge corridor. Overlooking the double-height dining space to one side, and the kitchen to the other, this interesting architectural feature is used to emphasize the home’s secondary axis along its key circulation route. On the first floor, the base of this bridge is fitted with a long black light track that visually accentuates the linearity of the path it’s positioned along.

Flipped House, dining area, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Flipped House, dining / living, Image Courtesy © Borxu

After crossing this bridge passageway in the upstairs addition, one arrives to a flexible family room. This carries on to a small wooden patio built atop the existing garage. At the bridge’s other end is an airy home office providing desk space for two. Moving southwest from here, the home again becomes increasingly private — one first enters the master bedroom, complete with a walk-in closet and his-and-hers skylights above the two nightstands, then turns a corner into the ensuite. A bathtub is given pride of place in the centre of the room positioned in front of a generous window, with the shower and water closet concealed in symmetrical niches at the room’s western end.

Flipped House, family room / bridge, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Flipped House, Living / dining, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Throughout, the project uses geometric volumes to play with the boundaries between its various spaces. The home’s kitchen island, for instance, extends to become a landing for the adjacent staircase. As one continues to the staircase’s next flight, a small cutout in a partial-height partition offers a view northeast that aligns with the axis created by that landing and island. Elsewhere on the first floor, a small powder room is enclosed in a free-standing volume near the front entrance that helps to delineate the house’s mudroom from the adjacent den area — a transition further played up by a change in flooring materials from tile to oak.

Flipped House, dining / living, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Flipped House, entry foyer looking towards the kitchen, Image Courtesy © Borxu

In contrast to the home’s warm, light-soaked interiors, the property’s dark front elevation creates the impression of a strong, fortified abode. By maintaining the brick enclosure of its predecessor — now painted black — the house required no excavation, making it a more affordable and sustainable solution than a design that would have required significant demolition and starting new construction from scratch. With the exception of one large window installed in the pop-out volume that extends out from the living room, all of the main-floor and basement windows are carried over from the original structure.

Flipped House, looking from the family room towards the kitchen, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Flipped House, looking from the home office towards the living area, Image Courtesy © Borxu

Maintaining the original footprint of the structure it replaces also keeps Flipped House sensibly sized relative to its neighbours. A slatted screen on the second storey is installed to distort the scale of the property and ensure that the structure reads more like a monolithic object than a typical home. New construction — including the first-storey living room pop-out, and the second storey addition — is distinguished in grey stucco to chart the dwelling’s evolution.

Flipped House, home office, Image Courtesy © Borxu

About RZLBD

rzlbd is an award winning boutique architectural practice based in Toronto founded by the architect Reza Aliabadi (OAA, MRAIC, ICEO); whose work extends to designing buildings & objects, curating installations & expositions, and publishing a zine called rzlbdPOST. The practice is not just an ordinary operation that serves, rather like a positive virus, it contributes, communicates, challenges, and adapts itself to the project and its context.

Axonometric Diagram, Image Courtesy © Atelier RZLBD

Concept Diagram, Image Courtesy © Atelier RZLBD

Program, Image Courtesy © Atelier RZLBD

Spatial Organization, Image Courtesy © Atelier RZLBD

Invisible Geometry, Image Courtesy © Atelier RZLBD

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Categories: House, Residential




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