Privacy for Five


View From the Street


Front Entry

Rear Entry

Double Height Breezeway

Entry Level

Kitchen

Living Room

View to the Living Room

Bathroom
Geddes House

Vancouver,  Canada West

splyce design

Related Entries: Gould Residence,
As one approaches this house from the street, a commanding 70’-0” foot wide horizontal roof line punctuated with a deep 7’-0” overhang dominates the view above the tree flanked property line. Beneath the cedar soffit, the exterior walls push in and out, creating a varied composition of light and shadow.

While the irregular pie shaped lot precluded many options for siting the house, it served as one of the main forces in shaping the design. To maximize the sites broad southern exposure and landscaping potential, the house sits tight against its rear setback to the north. Clad in corrugated galvalume panels with punched openings, the northern wall gently curves as it conforms to the setback, creating a unique formal and material departure from that of the rest of the house.

Juxtaposed to this distinct shape and materiality, are two cedar clad rectilinear volumes with tall windows and doors that open up to capture the southern light and ocean views. A double height breezeway and circulation zone, which runs the full depth of the house, separates these two volumes and provides natural cross ventilation and becomes the social hub of the house. Spanning the tall open space is a steel stair bridging the two main levels of the house. The top landing of the stair opens onto a large, south-west facing, outdoor room and sundeck, complete with a sink and food preparation area.

While the interior is open and inter-connected, undulating wall planes, and changes in floor and ceiling elevation effectively define spaces. Every member, in this active family of five is afforded their own private space. Large sliding panels offer a level of flexibility to many areas in the home, rendering a space public or private, large or small, depending on their open or closed position.







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provides design focused information that homeowners can use to improve the quality of how and where they live. It takes its name from the slow food movement which arose as a reaction to the processed food industry. The sprawl of cookie cutter housing that surrounds us is like fast food - standardized, homogenous, and wasteful. It contributes to a too fast life that is bad for us, our cities, and the environment. In the same way that slow food raises awareness of the food we eat and how these choices affect our lives, Slow Home empowers you to take more control of your home and improve the quality of how you live while reducing your environmental impact and futureproofing the long term investment value of your home.