Cherry Valley | StudioAC

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Cherry Valley | StudioAC

Information

  • Project Name: Cherry Valley
  • Practice: StudioAC
  • Completion year: 2023
  • Project Location: Toronto
  • Country: Canada
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Jennifer Kudlats, Andrew Hill
  • Design Team: Matei Rau, Mo Soroor, Jennifer Kudlats, Andrew Hill
  • Structural Consultants: Honeycomb
  • Contractors: Whitaker Construction
  • Photo Credits: Felix Michaud
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Excerpt: Cherry Valley by StudioAC is a project that blends contemporary spatial design with its form and materiality inspired by agrarian architecture. The house is nestled into a hillside that is held back by a solid wall made of brick. The cedar roof of the house interacts with the trees to create a frame for the views of the lake. The interior is covered in Douglas fir planks, with walls that interact with the external tectonics being clad in brick.

Project Description

Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud

[Text as submitted by architect] The site for this home offers both, starting with a meadow-like plateau upon entry, and then a ridge that quickly descends to the lakeshore. This seam became a focal point for one’s experience of the site—a natural perch just below the tree canopy, sheltered from the wind at one’s back by the ridge, and with a view to the water framed by the underside of the tree canopy. This is where the house was intended to be sited.

Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
Site Plan © StudioAC
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud

The house is sunken into the ridge, once again protected at its back and providing a vantage point below the trees. Large windows on the waterside frame views of the shore, while panoramic windows at ground level facing the meadow offer a vantage point to the ‘field.’

Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
Ground Floor Plan © StudioAC
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
Section © StudioAC
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud

This panoramic view immerses the viewer in the landscape rather than placing them on top of it, allowing observation of the strata of nature from soil, fern, tree, and sky. Larger dormers bring additional light from above, sometimes conventionally through the vertical surface, and at other times through horizontal analogs reminiscent of light beaming through the tree canopy.

Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
Section © StudioAC
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud

While the spatial sequencing and siting concept are quite contemporary, the form and materiality of the project draw inspiration from more agrarian architecture in the area. Brick and cedar celebrate the duality of the site.

Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
Models © StudioAC
Cherry Valley | StudioAC
© Felix Michaud

Brick is used on the solid wall that holds back the hillside into which the house is nestled, while a cedar roof wraps down the facade facing the water, engaging in a dialogue with the trees that frame the lake views. The interior is entirely clad in Douglas fir boards, with brick again cladding walls that engage in a dialogue with the exterior tectonics.

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