Press kit no. 1317-29

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Press kit - Press release - La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture

Press Kit | no. 1317-29

La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours

Saint-Donat, Canada

ACDF Architecture

Montreal, Canada, 2026-01-20 - 

La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours draws its strength from the striking beauty of its site—from its relationship to the horizon, the lake, and the rocky escarpments. Designed to offer a living experience deeply rooted in the landscape, the house establishes an intimate dialogue between nature and its occupants. Every architectural component resonates with the site—whether through blurred interior-exterior transitions, immersive pathways that dramatize movement from one zone to another, powerful horizontal framings created by deep cantilevers, or the use of stone monoliths that serve both as structural anchors and physical extensions of the terrain. The result is a unique form of immersion into the exceptional setting of Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm, in the heart of the Lanaudière region, north of Montreal.


A respectful relationship to the site

Located on the shore of Lac Archambault, the house sits on land once occupied by a summer camp, abandoned for many years. It was carefully positioned in a partially cleared area of the lot, accessed via an old service path, where the ground was naturally flatter, thus avoiding any intervention in the steeper parts of the site.


The house offers a living experience that is both enveloping and open. Despite its size, it remains discreet when viewed from the lake. It forms a protective, almost secret place—one that gives a sense of being sheltered, while still allowing for full immersion in the surrounding nature.


Through careful framing, recesses, and controlled transparency, the project explores a subtle paradox: to see without being seen. It creates a relationship to the world that is at once calm and intense—where one can withdraw without isolation, contemplate without exposure, and inhabit without overpowering.


Three layers in dialogue with the site

The architecture of La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours is articulated through three main elements, designed as complementary layers. Together, they allow the home to engage with the landscape in a refined and sensitive way.


The first element is a vast timber roof structure that defines both the architecture and the spatial experience of the home. Composed of glulam beams assembled into a coffered system, it creates deep cantilevers that extend the interior into the landscape. Appearing to float above the ground, this roof frames carefully composed views of the lake and surrounding mountains, while softening the boundary between inside and out.


The second element consists of a series of stone walls that function as both structural supports and sculptural gestures. Integrated into the terrain like natural extensions of the bedrock, they ground the house firmly within the site.


The third element consists of darker wooden volumes that house the bedrooms and service areas. Less open and more inward-looking than the main living spaces, these volumes are set back from the roof structure to create moments of privacy and retreat. Together, these three layers define an architecture that is both protective and open, with each part contributing to a nuanced and site-sensitive interpretation of place.


“We didn’t want to impose a shape on the landscape—we wanted to reveal what was already there,” says architect Maxime Frappier.


A roof as both gesture and refuge

A 5’x5’ coffered timber roof spans the central portion of the house, sheltering the main living areas. The structure is primarily supported by a series of stone monoliths, deliberately positioned away from the corners, allowing for majestic cantilevers that extend the interior outward into the landscape. This structural strategy not only creates expansive, sheltered outdoor spaces, but also dissolves the boundary between inside and out. Beyond its striking presence, the structure evokes a strong sense of protection, fostering a warm, enveloping atmosphere that anchors the home within its natural surroundings.


The contrast between monumentality and human scale gives rise to a rich and almost hypnotic experience. The roof does not simply provide shelter—it also orchestrates a subtle dialogue between visual strength and lived softness.


“We wanted the structure to elevate the place without distancing the people who inhabit it,” explains Frappier.


Acoustic panels are installed within each timber coffer, enhancing the comfort and quietude of the main living spaces. Discreet lighting devices are integrated along the perimeter of these panels, gently illuminating the warm texture of the surrounding wood. Strategically placed skylights further enrich the architectural rhythm, allowing natural light to shift across the surfaces throughout the day and seasons. Together, this careful treatment of sound and light fosters a profound sense of intimacy and calm that is perfectly in tune with the home’s vocation as a sanctuary in harmony with nature.


The structural columns are concealed within large monolithic stone walls, sparingly placed to help define subspaces throughout the interior. As they extend outward, some of these walls gradually transform into low stone partitions—murets—that root the house into the ground, as if they were natural extensions of the terrain. Their materiality and positioning suggest they have always been part of the site—revealed rather than built—like a geological outgrowth of the landscape itself.


This architectural strategy not only enhances the perceived lightness of the roof, but also reinforces the project’s integration with its surroundings, establishing an organic continuity between the built and the natural. In this sense, the house follows in the footsteps of modernist principles, demonstrating how architecture can soften the boundary between shelter and landscape, between human presence and the natural world.


A fluid and immersive living space

The living areas are organized in a fluid sequence designed to support both conviviality and privacy. The kitchen—with its cozy dinette—and the sunken living room open wide to the lake. At the center of the plan, the dining room enjoys a double visual connection to both the forest and the water, deepening the immersive experience.


The fireplace serves as the central gathering element. Visible from all shared spaces, it anchors the kitchen, dining room, and living room, creating a warm, unifying presence around which domestic life revolves.


A secondary kitchen, hidden within a dark wood volume and accessed via a discreet passage, supports gatherings without interfering with the main social spaces. To the rear of the kitchen, a large screened terrace unfolds beneath the roof’s overhang. Equipped with retractable mosquito screens, it becomes a true outdoor living room—protected from the elements and insects, while remaining in constant dialogue with nature. An outdoor fireplace placed in perfect alignment with the indoor hearth creates a striking symmetry. From the kitchen island, both fireplaces are in view, reinforcing the continuity between interior and exterior, and heightening the immersive connection with the landscape.


Private wings in continuity with nature

Flanking the central living spaces are two distinct wings—one dedicated to the parents, the other to the children. A partial upper level, located above the children's wing, houses a guest suite and the family’s workspaces, providing both privacy and spatial fluidity in daily life.


The master suite is accessed via a glazed corridor, designed as a true threshold between shared areas and a quieter world. Bathed in light and open to the surroundings, this passage enhances the sense of retreat and eases the transition to a slower, more peaceful rhythm.


The parental suite includes a lake-facing bedroom, an intimate lounge, a generous walk-in closet, and a bathroom that opens onto the forest. The seamless spatial flow between these elements creates a sensory continuity with the surrounding landscape, encouraging calm, introspection, and a deep connection to nature.


Outside, a sunken terrace, bordered by built-in benches and a fireplace, extends the atmosphere of calm and reflection. Nestled into the terrain, it invites deep connection with the elements—water, wood, and stone—offering a living experience that is both immersive and grounded.

Opposite, a dark wood-clad hallway leads to a large playroom that acts as a bridge between the main living areas and the children’s bedrooms. Generously lit, and open at both ends to the outdoors, this space becomes a fluid transition zone between collective life and private retreat. This playroom also provides access to the upper-level spaces designed to host guests and support the family’s work life.


Adjacent to the central volume, a soft, lounge-like alcove offers a flexible retreat, complete with built-in bunks for children or visiting friends. A home cinema completes the floor, adding a playful, social dimension to this warm and highly functional level.


The children’s bedrooms open generously onto the landscape and have direct access to a private terrace—an ideal spot for relaxation in nature. From this terrace, a small wooden bridge crosses over a planted zone to reconnect with the main terrace. This simple gesture reinforces the connections between the project’s different layers, and enhances the continuity between indoor and outdoor spaces.


An architecture of connection and revelation

La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours expresses a vision of architecture in which form, material, and lived experience come together to reveal the richness of place. Far from imposing a spectacular gesture, the project focuses on unveiling what the site already offered: light, topography, proximity to water, and the density of the forest.


Through precise composition, honest materiality, and constant attention to spatial experience, architecture here becomes a medium of connection—between people, between interior and exterior, between the built and the natural.


Architecture: ACDF Architecture
Structure: Poincaré Experts-Conseils inc.
Builder: Marion Gauthier
Mechanical: Denis Houle – Nord-Ouest Climatisation et Ventilation Élite
Electrical: Cloutier Électrotechnique
Plumbing: Tuyautech
Landscape: Isabel Hamel (design), Charbonneau Parker (realization)

About ACDF Architecture

With a portfolio of ambitious and design-savvy commercial, residential, hospitality, interior, and master planning projects, ACDF is recognized as one of Canada’s most forward-thinking architecture firms. Under the direction of Maxime-Alexis Frappier, Joan Renaud, and Etienne Laplante Courchesne, the firm’s harmonious designs of large-scale projects have received numerous awards and accolades in recognition of their progressive approach to a new generation of meaningful and impactful buildings.


ACDF is built upon a foundation of pragmatism and creativity, embracing the belief that every building should serve its inhabitants and passersby. Beyond the status of grand gestures and iconic appearances, the firm believes that buildings should be experiences infused with emotive and democratic architecture that touches and benefits all who come in contact with it. That process begins with practical solutions and creative designs that foster harmonious architecture, ensuring that every finished structure projects a sense of meaning and mission.


Based in Montreal, Quebec, ACDF draws inspiration from a city known for its liveability and vitality, and which straddles the divide between Europe and North America, and between the historic and the modern. Energized by challenges and constraints, ACDF explores and evaluates each project’s limitations in order to inject it with fresh ideas and innovative solutions that exceed expectations and imaginations.

- 30 -

For more information

  1. acdf.ca/en/

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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - View from the shore of Baie de l'Ours - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
View from the shore of Baie de l'Ours
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Walkway connecting the main terrace to the children’s terrace and the built-in spa - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Walkway connecting the main terrace to the children’s terrace and the built-in spa
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: ACDF
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - View of the dining room and passage leading to the primary suite. - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
View of the dining room and passage leading to the primary suite.
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Primary suite - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Primary suite
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Bathroom of the primary suite - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Bathroom of the primary suite
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Private terrace off the primary suite with built-in lounge and fireplace - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Private terrace off the primary suite with built-in lounge and fireplace
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Cinema - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Cinema
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Games room with access to the guest suite and the family office upstairs - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Games room with access to the guest suite and the family office upstairs
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Guest suite - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Guest suite
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Children’s lounge - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
Children’s lounge
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - children’s suite - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
children’s suite
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - children’s suite - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
children’s suite
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Photo credit: Adrien Williams
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Site plan - Photo credit: ACDF
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - Main Floor Plan - Photo credit: ACDF
Main Floor Plan
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Press kit | 1317-29 - Press release | La Maison de la Baie de l’Ours - ACDF Architecture - Residential Architecture - 2nd floor plan - Photo credit: ACDF
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