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Dossier de presse | no. 7516-02
Communiqué seulement en anglais
Toronto’s High Park neighbourhood carries a familiar rhythm: leafy streets, Edwardian facades, and a park that threads nature through the urban fabric. For a young family of four, the main floor offered little breathing room—tight, disconnected spaces with limited daylight and no relationship to the garden. The renovation lifts these constraints, opening the ground level into a warm, continuous sequence of kitchen, dining, and family spaces—defined by long sight-lines, layered materiality, and an intuitive sense of architectural order.
From the outset, the design balanced practicality with atmosphere. For parents working in creative fields, the home needed to support family life, while reflecting a shared appreciation for craft, natural textures, and the quiet presence of light. Millwork, daylight, and proportion work together to shape space instead of decorating it, bringing clarity and a collected calm to a modest urban footprint.
A double-width brick wall originally bisected the main floor, separating the kitchen from living spaces and blocked natural light. Removing it required significant structural intervention, but opened the plan to breathe. Circulation now moves naturally from front to back, with spaces that are distinct, yet visually connected. Relocating the kitchen to the rear placed daily family life at the brightest edge of the house, where an asymmetrical sliding door opens wide to the garden and draws daylight deep into the interior.
Throughout the main floor, charcoal-stained oak millwork acts as a quiet architectural spine. It turns corners, conceals storage, frames display niches, and defines room boundaries without adding visual clutter. Rather than reading as cabinetry, it becomes part of the architecture—grounding the home, guiding movement, and offering a stillness that balances family activity. One recessed opening forms a counter nook and frames a ‘living photograph’ of the outdoors, where changing light and foliage animate the interior like a slow-moving canvas.
Material restraint brings warmth and cohesion. Wide-plank white oak flooring stretches the length of the plan, limestone-washed walls offer a soft, matte backdrop, and quartzite stone brings subtle veining and warmth. In the kitchen, a stone shelf replaces upper cabinets, keeping the sightline open while providing space for meaningful objects. A curved island softens circulation paths and anchors the room as a place to gather, prepare food, or simply pause throughout the day.
The dining area is composed for intimacy and ease. A built-in banquette preserves clear movement through the room while offering an intimate setting for meals. Rounded wood edges, caramel-leather upholstery, and sculptural lighting create a tactile calm that pairs comfortably with the family’s day-to-day life and informal hosting.
The rear deck extends the interior outward. Flush thresholds, thermory-ash decking, and cedar fencing create a sheltered outdoor room that expands the home’s usable space. New plantings, warm wood tones, and filtered light form a quiet garden enclosure—an urban retreat for slow mornings or long summer dinners. The result is a home that lives larger than its footprint, with the garden functioning as an extension of the main floor.
Light is the quiet protagonist. With a north-facing backyard and limited opportunities for side openings, daylight became both a challenge and a guiding inspiration. The careful placement of glazing, reflective surfaces, and material tones draws light through the interior in measured, gentle ways. Across oak, plaster, and stone, the day unfolds in shifting shadow and colour—subtle changes that animate the rooms without effort. Artificial lighting is understated, allowing the architecture and its materials to hold the mood, and letting the smallest functional elements read as quiet sculptural gestures.
House High Park moves with its family. From mornings around the island to evenings in the garden, the home supports connection, quiet, and routine with equal intention. More than a renovation, it is a study in how clarity, materiality, and daylight can reshape a traditional urban interior into a warm, contemporary refuge rooted in its neighbourhood.
Technical Sheet
Project Name: House High Park
Location: Highpark North, Toronto, ON
Architect: Jacob Jebailey
Design Team: Nupur Garg
Structural Engineer: Contact Engineering
General Contractor: Lijn Contracting
Completion: 2024
Photographer: Riley Snelling
Art Consultant: Laura Mann, Pearl Rowe Art Advisory
About Reign Architects
Reign Architects is a Toronto-based studio committed to designing thoughtful, modern environments that enrich everyday life. Their work is grounded in the principles of biophilic design, and an understanding that the meeting point between architecture and nature can restore, calm, and inspire. They approach each project with a respect for craft and a belief that purposeful design has the power to support how people feel, gather, rest, and live.
The firm views architecture as the shaping of experience. Their spaces offer clarity and warmth; places where routine feels considered, and where moments of beauty emerge through plays of light, detail, proportion, and connection to landscape.
For Reign Architects, the built environment is a medium for wellbeing; a form of space-making that elevates the human experience with subtlety, elegance, and care.
Pour plus d’informations
Contact média
Reign Architects
Jacob JeBailey, Principal architect
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