Maison Melba, Frelighsburg, Québec Passive-House Project, Architecture, New Québec Real Estate Project Images

Maison Melba in Frelighsburg, Québec

Oct 22, 2023

Design: Atelier L’Abri

Location: Frelighsburg, Montérégie, Québec, Canada

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Québec Passive House

Photos: Alex Lesage

Maison Melba, Québec

Atelier L’Abri presents Maison Melba, a place of life, creation, and exchange designed in harmony with the landscape and rustic heritage of the Village of Frelighsburg, on a small Eastern Townships road leading to Vermont.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Passive House

Anchored in preservation and sustainability, this unique architectural project tells a story: that of the sensitive and sustainable renovation of a rural building nestled in the heart of the meadows and orchards emblematic of this agricultural region of southern Quebec.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada

Embodying the new owner’s values of sharing and hospitality, the former 1970s automobile garage has been transformed into a living space that is open to the community and the development of collaborative projects.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada

Inspired by the fertile ecosystem of Frelighsburg, Maison Melba now houses a residence, a work studio, a workshop, and a culinary production and meeting space. Outside, the small plot of land also includes a greenhouse and a garden dedicated to small-scale vegetable production, with the majority of food production to be consumed or processed on-site.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada

The timeless architecture of Maison Melba reflects the vision and values. The project’s design is based on sensitivity to details and the passive-house expertise of the architects, resulting in a project where beauty is in harmony with performance.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada Passive House

A sensitive architecture

The building plan is distinguished by a large interstice slicing through the center of the building. Beneath a high skylight, the local natural stone floor extends the landscaping indoors to create a transitional space between the house and the creative areas. The entrance doors to the residence and the workshop each open onto this narrow common alley adorned with plants.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada Passive House

Inside the house, the open plan is softly punctuated by furniture. The atmosphere is calm and warm. The sequence of spaces is composed of small moments conducive to the appreciation of materials, details, and nature. The eye wanders over the Douglas Fir floor, the lime-coated walls, the white oak furniture, the massive hemlock structure, the tall linen curtains, and the large wood windows that frame the landscape. On the workshop side, industrial-grade materials in neutral colors blend subtly into a bright canvas that invites collaboration and creativity. On both the residential and public sides, modular kitchens on legs integrate lightly with the rest of the composition. In each space, the careful selection of lamps completes a tableau drawn with care and delicacy.

The exterior of the building wears a noble and timeless look that blends with the countryside. The steel roof will protect the natural-colored building for a long time, while the wood planks will gradually shift from brown to gray under the influence of time and the elements. Beneath the large weeping willow tree, the long horizontal structure of the former garage will age quietly in the landscape of native plants.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Passive House

A sustainable transformation

To age well, a building must first be well-designed. In accordance with L’Abri’s Passive-House approach, Maison Melba will soon be LEED Platinum certified, the highest level of this reference standard for sustainable buildings.

To begin this transformation, the building’s envelope that had reached its end of life was carefully dismantled to preserve only the original wood frame behind the house’s distinctive mansard silhouette. A new double-stud wall structure was then built within the existing skeleton to allow for increased insulation thickness, while reducing thermal bridges. These new thick walls, reminiscent of ancient constructions, are filled with cellulose fiber, a natural insulation material made from recycled paper. On the exterior, the intermediate cladding is composed of ecological and insulating sheathing panels made from entirely recycled wood fiber, another bio-sourced product. PassivHaus certified triple-glazed windows complete the envelope and promote passive-solar principles. Finally, an exemplary air tightness rating of 0.37 ACH at 50Pa gives the building exceptional energy efficiency performance. With this technical rigor, Maison Melba will be part of the Frelighsburg landscape for many decades to come.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Passive House

A holistic vision

L’Abri’s design vision is based on the fundamental and necessary balance between beauty, utility, and durability in order to deliver truly timeless architecture. Driven by values shared with the project’s founder, the sustainable transformation of Maison Melba is an inspiring demonstration of this ideal. The successful completion of this ambitious project relies on an integrated design process led by the design-build team of Atelier L’Abri and Construction Modulor, as well as the exemplary execution of the entire project team.

The project’s design integrates and celebrates the exceptional work of a long list of suppliers, manufacturers, designers, artisans, and consultants. The architectural language of Maison Melba highlights the material richness of the Kebony wood cladding, artisanal lime plaster, Dinesen wood floors, and Bisson Bruneel textiles. The carefully selected furniture features pieces from international design houses such as Vipp, Dinesen, Frama, Santa & Cole, and Ligne Roset, alongside works from talented local designers and makers like Clara Jorisch, Kastella, Atelier Vaste, Mark Krebs, Montauk, and Ema ceramics.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Québec Passive House

The landscape design was carried out by Écomestible, a firm specializing in ecological, edible, and regenerative landscaping inspired by permaculture principles. Écohabitation supervised the LEED certification process of the project. Finally, the project was captured through the attentive eye of photographer Alex Lesage, who remained on site for several days.

Maison Melba is the fruit of this beautiful and collaborative work. It is a project enriched by the invaluable contributions of all these actors gathered around the creation of a new chapter in the life of a building in harmonious relationship with its context and its environment. Maison Melba is a project of the heart that looks towards an optimistic future.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Canada

Maison Melba in Québec, Canada – Building Information

Design: Atelier L’Abri – Fabelta

Project: Maison Melba

Site: Frelighsburg, Québec, Canada
Area: 4850 pi2 (450m2)

Client: Maison Melba

Architecture: Atelier L’Abri
Project team: Pia Hocheneder, Vincent Pasquier, Nicolas Lapierre, Francis Martel-Labrecque

Contractor: Construction Modulor
Engineers: Robert Harvey Ing.
LEED Certifiers: Écohabitation
Landscape: Écomestible, Braska

Completion: 2023

Photography: Alex Lesage

Collaborators
Enveloppe: Kebony, Internorm, Velux, Steico, Salola
Floors: Dinesen
Woodwork: Kastella
Kitchen: Vipp
Furniture: Vipp, Dinesen, Clara Jorisch, Atelier Vaste, Ligne Roset, Montauk, Mark Krebs, Frama, Bludot
Lighting: Vipp, Sistemalux, Santa & Cole, Flos, Muuto, nTradition, Barn Light
Ceramic and Plumbing : Ramacieri, Argelith, Laufen, Duravit, Systempool, AeT Italia
Hardware: Dörr, Formani, Aria Vent
Fireplace: Stûv
Accessories: Clara Jorisch, Ema ceramics, Bisson Bruneel, House on the Rocks
Appliances: Miele, Falmec, Elica, Fisher & Paykel

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Québec Passive House

About Atelier L’Abri
Atelier L’Abri is an architecture and construction firm based in Montreal. The award-winning workshop specializes in ecological, healthy, and sustainable construction. It advocates for innovative architecture solutions, putting forward wellness and the human and social character of our environments. Through its design-build approach, L’Abri delivers turn-key projects combining quality and performance. L’Abri’s designs are resolutely contemporary, unique, and at the human scale.

Maison Melba Frelighsburg Passive House

Photography: Alex Lesage

Maison Melba, Frelighsburg, Québec information / images received 221023 from v2com newswire

Location: Frelighsburg, Brome-Missisquoi Regional County Municipality, Montérégie, Québec, Canada

Montreal Architecture

New Montreal Architecture

New Montreal Architecture Designs – chronological list

Montreal Architectural Tours
Montreal Architecture Walking Tours by e-architect

Chalet La petite soeur, Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm, Canada
Architects: ACDF Architecture
Chalet La Petite Soeur in Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm
photography : Adrien Williams
Residence in Saint-Donat-de-Montcalm

La Luge Cabin, La Conception, in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada
Architects: YH2
La Luge
photograph : Francis Pelletier
New House in La Conception

Mount-Royal Kiosks, Parc du Mont-Royal, Montreal, QC, Canada
Architectes: Atelier Urban Face
Mount Royal Kiosks
photographers : Fany Ducharme, Normand Rajotte, Sylvain Legault and Sylvie Perrault
Mount-Royal Kiosks

Centre de services Le Bonnallie, Parc national du Mont-Orford, Orford, QC
Design: Anne Carrier architecture
Centre de Services le Bonnallie
photographer: Stéphane Groleau
Centre de services Le Bonnallie

Canadian Architects

Canadian Architecture

Montreal Buildings

Canadian Buildings

Comments / photos for the Maison Melba in Québec designed by Atelier L’Abri Canada Architecture page welcome

Website: Frelighsburg, Montérégie