EXPLORE
Movato
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us
Movato
EXPLORE
Home in Canada
No Result
View All Result

Outside In

Unusual design and building materials create a sense of being outdoors in the interiors of this Quebec home.

by Elisabeth Kalbfuss
February 6, 2020
Share on FacebookPin itTweet itSend it

PHOTOGRAPHY: MAXIME BROUILLET

STYLING: LAURENT GUEZ

Laurent Guez used to get strange reactions when he told people his pet name for the country home he designed and built in Abercorn, Quebec. On the plans and in conversation he called it his “hangar à cochons,” or pig shed. It was an unusual inspiration and title, but it represented the ideas he wanted to evoke: a rural setting and a contemporary, industrial-style building made of basic construction materials in their natural form. “That was the vision,” Laurent says, “The idea behind the name was to create a strong image.”

Laurent Guez designed his Eastern Townships home to take advantage of its natural setting. Two raised decks, one on the east side of the home, one on the west, allow people to appreciate the morning and evening light.

The two-storey, 5,000-square-foot house, in Quebec’s Eastern Townships region, has four interconnected modules, and Laurent describes moving through the home from one module to the next as travelling through “a succession of surprises.” He kept a spirit of playfulness as he designed the new space and wanted to create visual contrast. That starts with the approach to the house itself, which looks small and unassuming. “That was my intention, to look small, and then come inside and see that it’s really big,” he says. 

The gold-coloured corrugated metal in the entranceway is a material usually used to clad exterior walls. Laurent used it here and in the dining room to contrast against the black metal he used on the outside of the building and in the kitchen. Light fixtures: Luminaire Authentik.

Inside, a variety of construction materials form the interior walls and give the space its industrial look. Many of them are often associated with building exteriors: exposed concrete, black and gold corrugated metal, plywood boards and cedar shingles. Laurent’s objective was to create a sense of being outside looking at the exterior of the building while inside. The black metal walls also recreate the sense of being surrounded by woods. “You have the impression of being in the forest,” he says.

Plywood is used in the guest bedrooms in geometric shapes, both to reflect light and give the space an unfinished feel. Since the rooms are for temporary guests, extra windows were added instead of closets. 

Because the house is north-facing, getting light into the building was a challenge. Working with architect Guillaume Kukucka, Laurent says the goal was “to follow the sun. Wherever the sun would hit the wall, we wanted to create an opening.” The result is lots of large windows and skylights. Laurent also worked with Luminaire Authentik to create the indoor lighting. Some of it is from the company’s standard line; some he designed with them; and some, he created himself.

Though Laurent and his partner have a city home, the house in the country was designed as their principal residence, and it was built with family in mind. There are common areas, extra bedrooms for children and grandchildren to come for the weekend and longer stays, and a small outbuilding with a ceramics workshop and a pool. Even though he was doing it for himself, Laurent, an industrial designer by profession, says he approached the design more like a work project than as his own home. His day job is at TUX agency, where he is the chief of retail and experiential design, and spends his time creating spaces for clients.

In addition to large windows, skylights were added in the dining area and the master bathroom. Flow and circulation were important to the homeowner, and while the living and dining spaces are open, the kitchen is in its own connected module at the back of the home, across a footbridge that opens over the downstairs.

The main living space is on the upper floor. It includes living and dining rooms, a master suite, a second bedroom and – at the back, slightly separated from the rest of the house – a hallway bridge that straddles the lower level and leads to the kitchen. 

There are two zones in the kitchen: a galley-style food preparation area and the window counter seating. Windows were placed strategically to give views out to the garden, patio and surrounding areas. A section of the kitchen floor was tiled to provide contrast to the main polished concrete floor. Tile: Stone Tile.

The kitchen features two main areas: food preparation on one side and an L-shaped eat-in counter that looks a bit like an upscale diner on the other. The counters face large windows that look out onto the trees. Because this module juts out at an angle, there’s a window that overlooks the outside and another that offers a view of the dining room, another of Laurent’s visual surprises.

In the master suite, he also challenged tradition. The hallway entrance doesn’t lead to the sleeping area, it opens into the bathroom and walk-in closet. A partial wall, lined with a long vanity, two sinks, mirrors and opaque glass separates this area from the actual bedroom.






  •  Tiles behind the sink in the guest bathroom: Stone Tile.

Downstairs, at garden level, there are two more bedrooms, an office, storage areas, and a big playroom and home theatre. Most of the walls here are exposed concrete with partial wood cladding: plywood in the bedrooms, cedar shingles halfway up the walls in the common areas. There are rocks, large ones, that poke up through the building’s footings, set into the polished concrete floors in the play area, again pulling the outdoors in. 

A central play area downstairs includes a home theatre and an open space where boulders from the building site have been embedded in the floor. The light fixture here extends 28 feet up through the main-floor living space to the ceiling, and the opening allows light from upstairs to come down. Concrete walls are used to give the space both a contemporary and Brutalist feel. 

Because the bedrooms are for guests, there are no closets, and plywood has been applied to the walls in sections. “It’s done to have a look that’s unfinished, almost as though you’ve run out of boards,” Laurent says. “It’s accented by the light.” He also played with the doorframes, some of which are 11 feet high, some only six.

“The house is my reflection on habitat,” Laurent says. “It’s about creating experiences.” •

Guillaume Kukucka, Architect
www.guillaumekukucka.com
514-691-2829

Stone Tile
www.stone-tile.com

Ceragres
www.ceragreslesbains.ceragres.ca

Velux
www.velux.ca

Luminaire Authentik
www.luminaireauthentik.com

Tags: architecturecountry homeindustrialinterior designquebec

Related Posts

Queen of Colour
Design

Queen of Colour

January 27, 2022

Photography: Donna Griffith https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zITY9ORNpHo&t=4s It was a grey and blustery day in February, and I was thrilled that I was...

New and Improved
Interior Design

New and Improved

December 11, 2021

Photography: Larry ArnalStyling: Michaela Burns Michaela Burns has a way with lines. They appear as geometric shapes on wallpaper, in...

Mixing It Up
Featured-Homepage

Mixing It Up

November 18, 2021

Photography: Lauren MillerStyling: Ashley Montgomery Choosing the right designer to redesign and decorate their three-storey home in Toronto’s Rosedale neighbourhood...

Colour in the Kitchen
Interior Design

Colour in the Kitchen

November 1, 2021

Colour has become a delightful design element in kitchens in recent years. Cabinetry colours range from vibrant reds and oranges...

Nights at the Round Table—and Breakfast, too!
Design Finds

Nights at the Round Table—and Breakfast, too!

September 9, 2021

The legendary King Arthur is said to have chosen a round table for his court so that his knights would...

Lost and Found
Decor

Lost and Found

August 13, 2021

I am fascinated by the salvage of shipwrecks. Not only do I want catalogues and videos about the treasures found...

Next Post
Fight The Flu With Food

Fight The Flu With Food

  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Digital Issues
Made with ❤️ in Montréal

© 2020 Home in Canada

No Result
View All Result
  • Interior Design
    • Bathroom
    • Bedroom
    • Decor
    • Design Finds
    • Kitchen
    • Living Room
    • Paint
    • Renovations
  • Architecture
  • Landscape
  • Lifestyle
    • People
    • Places
    • Things
  • About Us

© 2020 Home in Canada