Echo House | Kariouk Architects

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Echo House | Kariouk Architects

Information

  • Completion year: 2009
  • Gross Built up Area: 220 sq. mt.
  • Project Location: Ottawa
  • Country: Canada
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Paul Kariouk
  • Design Team: Chris Davis (Architect), Susan Gardiner (Design Associates), Cedric Boulet (Design Associates), Josee Labelle (Design Associates), Matthew Lahey (Design Associates), Todd Duckworth (Design Associates)
  • Engineering: Leibe Engineering (James Diamond)
  • Photo Credits: Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde
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Excerpt: Echo House designed by Kariouk Architects is a renovation of a modest Victorian home in poor condition, whose rooms with small windows and dark interior spaces were separated from one another. The house was re-envisaged as a vertical loft – an open, four-storey volume reaching from the basement to the ceiling of the new roof.

Project Description

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde

[Text as submitted by architect] The starting point for this renovation was a modest Victorian home in poor condition, whose rooms with small windows and dark interior spaces were separated from one another, as was typical of homes built in an era when privacy was a cultural priority. In another gesture to Victorian public decorum, the arrangement of the existing interior spaces reinforced the antiquated ideal that work life and family life should be kept distinct.

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
Ground Floor Plan © Kariouk Architects

Although the client required the renovated space to welcome work life in the home while continuing to maintain clear separations from their family life, it was also essential to create a modern, bright space that, albeit small in size, would still appear spacious and visually connected.

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde

Echo: noun; “A sympathetic or identical response, as to sentiments expressed; a lingering trace or effect” That the house had scarcely been changed since it was originally constructed was both a virtue and a challenge that enabled design opportunities. The footprint of the house is small (approximately seven-hundred square feet).  It was therefore not possible to create a loft-like setting on the ground floor that seemed simultaneously open and provided the required distinct work/living spaces. 

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde
Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde

The house was re-envisaged as a vertical loft – an open, four-storey volume reaching from the basement to the ceiling of the new roof. The new main level and former basement level are opened to each other by a wide stair that highlights views of the home’s original stone foundation walls. Hence, the former Victorian main living level, once segregated into four separate rooms, is now made open and spacious. The small, original windows are replaced with large windows both at the front and rear of the new parlour, visually extending that space into the front yard and the back yard, and, finally, enabling views from the back yard (all the way through the house) to views of the Rideau Canal.

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde
Echo House | Kariouk Architects
Second Plan © Kariouk Architects

The remaining spatial requirements included very private spaces: a study that could accommodate several thousand books, a den, and a master bedroom suite. In order to achieve the seemingly paradoxical request for a loft-like home but with spaces as private as the former Victorian ones, the study, den, and “book vault” are designed as distinct volumes suspended inside the larger, four-storey volume.  Because these volumes “float” high up within the now-emptied shell of the original house, they achieve the required visual privacy from the parlour below and the street outside (despite the expanded areas of windows). 

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde

Though these spaces are small, they are bright and airy and seem large since they all have visual access to both windows and other interior spaces of the home.

The very most private areas of the redesigned house (such as closets, toilets, and stairs) are arranged along the house’s south wall and shielded by a three-storey hickory “modesty screen.” At the top level, the master-bedroom suite cantilevers over the front facade and yard and also appears as a distinct, floating volume, and forms a canopy over the entry. 

Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde
Echo House | Kariouk Architects
© Photolux Studio – Christian Lalonde

In this way, the former attic space of the Victorian house is redesigned to provide light and views where none existed before in the original home, and due to its elevated position, it does so while maintaining privacy. At the initial request of the clients, this renovation allows the values of a bygone era to be given voice in the current era.

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