Toronto, Canada           
 By Ingrid Spencer-via:archrecord
           Photo © Tom Arban Photography
Most people are put out when it comes to deciding whether or not to  bring their aging parents into their home. Not Cindy Rendely’s clients  for the Ravine Residence. Rendely, principal of Toronto-based Cindy  Rendely Architexture, says her clients, a couple in their 40’s with  three teenage sons, had no problem having their aging parents move in  with them. “It was a problem for the parents, not for my clients,” she  says. “My clients always knew their parents would live with them. It was  just a question of how.” Rendely’s design for the family answered that  question, with a 6,800-square-foot home in the North York neighborhood  of central Toronto. While that size of home might sound large to some,  consider how many people it was designed for—the couple, three  teenagers, their aging grandparents and a caregiver couple. “And they  are very low key,” says Rendely. “Every space in this house had to  exhibit efficiency and practicality. While my clients have the means to  enjoy whatever lifestyle they want, they are very humble and choose to  live in a home where every area has a purpose and is not wasteful.” 
           Photo © Tom Arban Photography
That said, Rendely, who was trained as a goldsmith and jewelry designer  before becoming an architect, had beauty on her brain as well as  practicality. She has built her reputation on designing structures that  incorporate economy of scale with both minimal palettes and a variety of  textures (think few materials used in many different ways), and this  six-bedroom, five-bathroom home is no different. Built on a double lot  on one of the many ravines located in and around central Toronto, the   house was designed for a private, communal family lifestyle, with a rear  façade that opens up toward the ravine, essentially turning its  brick-and-aluminum-clad back to the street. 
           Photo © Tom Arban Photography
The house is three levels—main living spaces on the ground floor, master  bedroom and kids’ rooms upstairs, and a basement level built into the  sloping site on the rear. You enter the house on the center level. Once  inside, the severity of the front façade is soon forgotten, as a bright  vestibule welcomes you. Floor-to-ceiling glass walls wash the main  living spaces on the ground floor in sunlight and bring the outside in.  To the right is the grandparents’ suite, a full apartment with  kitchenette, made to feel intimate with lower ceiling heights than the  rest of the home. While Rendely says she didn’t follow ADA codes to the  letter, she did make the entire floor accessible—no stairs, pocket doors  instead of swinging doors, and a walk-in shower with a built-in bench  in the grandparents’ suite. “While my initial design called for an  elevator that would allow the grandparents access to the basement  level—which contains a suite for a caregiver couple–and the ravine  outside, my clients decided against it. They thought having an elevator  in their home was just too grand seeming.” While the grandparents must  be content with their expansive view of the ravine, the rest of the  family can access it by a flight of wide steps that leads from an  outdoor terrace.  
           Photo © Tom Arban Photography
The clients’ program demands didn’t include specific surfaces and  materials, and Rendely says she convinced them to trust her judgment  about most but not all such decisions. Her jewelry-making background is  apparent in her use of Eramosa limestone as a signature material, cut  and finished in a handful of different ways to bring out its hidden  properties. On the outside of the home the stone is splitfaced and  rugged, while on the inside it’s hammered and cut, polished and carved  to provide a variety of surfaces throughout. Similarly she used one  wood—white oak—with different stains on floors and for the custom-built  pieces that make up about 90 percent of the furniture. 
           Photo © Tom Arban Photography
With three fireplaces, radiant floor heating throughout, and all that  floor-to-ceiling glass, the home is comfortable year-round. According to  the homeowners, the feeling of being immersed in the landscape makes  everyone in the family, from teen to elder, feel like they’re  experiencing the home for the first time each day, as they watch the  light shift and the seasons change.           
           Image courtesy Cindy Rendely Architexture 
           Image courtesy Cindy Rendely Architexture 
           Image courtesy Cindy Rendely Architexture 
