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Custom Homes
A custom home is one of the most personal things you'll ever build. We approach it that way — with a lot of listening, a lot of care, and a process designed to make something genuinely complex feel manageable.
We've designed homes from modest to expansive. The scale changes. The attention doesn't.


HOUSE a18.12
Gradual rooflines, expansive glazing, and a material palette of stone and glass grounded by warmth and texture. Contemporary in precision, genuinely comfortable to live in. Sited at the water's edge, the architecture defers to its setting — open, unhurried, and entirely at ease.


HOUSE a21.36
When your client is also a designer, the conversation reaches another level. For this Oakville residence, we worked alongside interior designer Hali Macdonald in a genuinely collaborative process — we led the architectural drawings, Hali shaped key exterior decisions, from shutter design and chimney details to the final brick selection. Two creative perspectives, one cohesive result.
The home has since been featured in House Beautiful, where Hali discusses the story and philosophy behind it.
The home has since been featured in House Beautiful, where Hali discusses the story and philosophy behind it.


HOUSE a19.54


HOUSE a06.11
French Château, 19,000 square feet. The turret houses a rounded masonry stair — marble treads, risers, and stringers. Impressive in daylight. Extraordinary at night.


HOUSE a05.43


HOUSE a20.05
A confined lot in Forest Hill, a young active family, and a clear brief: fun, fresh, and contemporary. The front of the house is restrained — painted white brick, dark windows, a more considered take on the modern farmhouse aesthetic. The back is where it opens up. Designed in collaboration with Ali Budd Interiors, the project balances traditional street presence with a personality that comes fully alive once you're inside and out.


HOUSE a22.04
A contemporary corner home with glazing spanning almost its entire length — natural light throughout the day, architectural fins for privacy and facade interest. Warm brick to ground the contemporary language. Considered from every angle. Fun and fresh from all sides.


HOUSE a19.66
A heritage renovation with two details that define it. The first is a contemporary bay addition, steel fins housing a piano alcove, approved by the heritage authorities as a considered modern intervention rather than a compromise of the original. The second is the staircase: a wandering spiral running from the gable all the way down, deliberately imperfect in its curve. Not the precision of a perfect circle, but something more organic.


HOUSE a13.63
A pie-shaped lot at the end of a quiet street, with a panoramic view across the GTA that most sites never offer. The house is designed around that view — angled deliberately to capture the full breadth of it. Because the site is solid shale, a conventional basement wasn't an option. So the program was inverted: the rec room sits on the second floor, where the view is, rather than buried below grade where it would be wasted. A large terrace wraps the upper level, with a tight European-style stair descending to the pool below.


HOUSE a04.103
A large footprint, humbly expressed. Grading built up at the entry with garden beds of flowers and ground cover to soften the approach and anchor the scale. Cedar shingles and tumbled stone — materials that weather into a landscape rather than sitting on top of it.


HOUSE a13.50
A heritage Arts and Crafts house with a new coach house added to the rear — and the challenge of connecting the two without one overpowering the other. The solution was to treat the connection as a wall rather than a building: a flat-roofed link with copper detailing, glass, and custom wood windows that reads as a deliberate pause between the two structures. The landscaping — bosque planting with formal circles.


HOUSE a14.14
A traditional shingle and stone house, around 4,500 square feet, that sits comfortably in its street.


HOUSE i865


HOUSE a12.71
A deep lot, a clear brief, and clients who knew what they loved. The owners came with a specific vision — Arts and Crafts shingle style — and a street that presented a particular challenge: the house was large, and needed to wear its size lightly. Rather than reaching for white trim and pale finishes, darker tones were used throughout to draw the massing inward and let the house settle into its setting. The result is a traditional home that feels grounded rather than imposing, with a generous backyard and walkout connection to the rear.


HOUSE a16.18
A heritage renovation and restoration — a 3,500 square foot house that had been lived in for years without the structural attention it needed. The floors had shifted, the bones needed rebuilding, and the whole project required careful work before anything else could happen. The main living spaces were reorganized to the upper floor.


HOUSE a12.57
A Georgian brick house, cleanly interpreted. Proportions, detailing, and material that make the Georgian tradition endure. At 5000 square feet, it wears its size with ease. A new house that looks as though it has always been there.


GUEST HOUSE i25.17
This guest house addition was designed to feel less like something new and more like something that has always been there. Nestled in the countryside alongside an existing stone farmhouse, the architecture was carefully considered to complement its historic neighbour — in scale, material and character.
The interiors follow the same philosophy. Warm, layered and richly textured, the palette weaves together the client's existing antiques, artisanal European fabrics and thoughtfully chosen details that nod to traditional farmhouse living. Nothing feels forced or out of place — because nothing is.
The interiors follow the same philosophy. Warm, layered and richly textured, the palette weaves together the client's existing antiques, artisanal European fabrics and thoughtfully chosen details that nod to traditional farmhouse living. Nothing feels forced or out of place — because nothing is.


LOFT i24.21
This compact, multi-use loft punches well above its square footage. Designed for flexibility, the open-concept layout transitions easily between uses — art, yoga and wellness are accommodated in the main open area, while a private suite is discreetly tucked behind a modular millwork wall rather than a fixed partition.
Light, bright and thoughtfully organized, the space makes the most of every inch with maximized storage throughout. The palette is simple and fresh — adaptable rather than overly styled, so the space works as hard as its owner needs it to.
Light, bright and thoughtfully organized, the space makes the most of every inch with maximized storage throughout. The palette is simple and fresh — adaptable rather than overly styled, so the space works as hard as its owner needs it to.


TOWNHOMES c20.03


HOUSE i796
A renovation in transitional shingle style. The clients wanted white shingles and a Bel Air feel — the result is lighter and more relaxed than what was there before. A exterior transformation that changed the character of the house entirely.


HOUSE i907
A contemporary farmhouse in Mountain View. The clients wanted contemporary, they wanted white, and the result is a clean, transitional take on the farmhouse form.
Tell us about your project.
We're always happy to hear what people are thinking about building, even if it's early, even if it's not fully formed. The best projects often start with a vague idea and a lot of questions.
Fill in the form below and we'll be in touch within a couple of days.
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