Donald Chong Studio
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
 
   The Galley House emerged out of the context of studying patterns of the evolving typological landscape in Toronto, and the desire over the past century to maintain natural light within spaces affected by an urban block-type progressively becoming more dense and refined. The aim was to consider the project prototypically: how a new, slender detached housing type in Toronto can be viable in terms of square footage while not shortchanging itself on natural light. This attempt to re-use leftover lots by reforming typologies is hoped to be a sound approach to building in the North American city.
 
   Design concept and solution: 
The  clients had a long, narrow  urban-infill site just west of Toronto’s  downtown core, on a side residential  street where lots are typically  25-feet wide, almost double in width than this  particular lot. The  2,400-square-foot house is a three-story single-family  dwelling 62-feet  long with clear width dimensions of less than 12 feet—there  are no  windows on the side faces due to the municipal code restraints. The   house has three bedrooms, and a double-height family room that opens to  the  street. The backside opens to the north, with a sunken garden court  extending  from a 13-foot-tall kitchen space through a  pivot-window/back door combination. 
   The stairs were custom designed in response to the “slimmer” allowances for stair openings and with the ambition to allow more light into the house. The front stair facing the street is formed from 3/8-inch-thick laser-cut plates with a “billowing” underside to bring light into the living room below while “shaping” supply air toward the glass from the column beneath; the same stair also provides a structural brace to laterally support the fully glazed upper front elevation. A “light scoop” was introduced over the kitchen to avoid direct exposure to the neighbors—for fire and privacy reasons—while allowing sunlight to diffuse evenly through the space.
 
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
   | PeopleArchitectDonald Chong Studio 235 Carlaw Avenue, Suite 400 Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4M 2S1 P: 416.818.1983 F: 416.703.7754 Project team Contractor: Derek Nicholson, Inc Interiors and lighting: White Studio (Karen White) Structural Engineering Blackwell Bowick Partnership Geotechnical Consultants Haddad Geotechnical Mechanical Consultants Thomas Technical Photography Bob Gundu Steven Evans Design Team Donald Chong, Chris Routley, Sandy McIntosh (models) | ProductsMiscellaneous MetalsGeorge Pietras Custom Metal Fabrication Etmeco Ltd. Custom Milwork Daniel Thompson Furniture and Cabinets Kitchen Cabinetry bulthaup | 
