Neville Park House, Ontario residential project, Toronto homes, Canadian interior architecture photos
Neville Park House, Toronto, Ontario residential project
27 October 2024
Design: Reigo & Bauer
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Photos by Doublespace Photography
Neville Park House, Canada
On a sloping site in Toronto’s east end, this single-family, four-bedroom home is tucked into a gully with steep slopes up the backyard and on the opposite side of the street. Canadian studio Reigo & Bauer designed this ground-up build using geometric manoeuvres to make the most of the narrow site and create an eye-catching structure.
The Neville Park building’s tall, vertically emphasized form speaks to the old trees that tower over the houses as they climb up the hills either side. Its exterior is clad almost entirely in grey diamond-shaped tiles, which follow from the walls over the garage door and the roof so that the building reads as a coherent volume.
A portion of the envelope is carved away on the south side, allowing space for steps to the front door, and additional windows in the sides of bays that are formed by this partial setback. These face one another, rather than overlooking the neighbouring property, and bring significantly more light into the centre of the house while adhering to zoning restrictions.
A portion of the south elevation is set back from the main facade and highlighted by white concrete boards, which extend to the roofline and also curve over the entry steps below, sheltering the access route from the front of the house. Playing with simple geometries to achieve unexpected results—a common ace in Reigo & Bauer’s hand—also occurs on the roof, which comprises triangular facets that connect the offset pitch peaks diagonally from the front of the house to the back.
Narrow, staggered windows on both of the shorter front and back facades allow in plenty of light, while maintaining an element of privacy for the residents. In the street-facing dining room, these windows are pulled above the ceiling plane for further vertical accentuation.
Meanwhile, at the rear, the living room ceiling curves and angles up to accommodate the elongated windows, drawing the eye up to the wooded hill behind the house. These clever gestures make the rooms feel much taller, without taking any space from the floor above.
At entry level, a central block contains a powder room, a pantry, and storage facing two sides. This helps to partition and organize the spaces around it, which flow together without the need for doors. The kitchen occupies the area in between the dining and living rooms, and features minimal white cabinetry and surfaces for a clean, understated appearance.
A muted green wall divides the kitchen from the staircases, but a pair of pill-shaped cutouts between cabinets offer sightlines and daylight to both the upper and lower flights. A similarly shaped mirror in the middle reflects back a view of the kitchen, creating a fun visual trick.
The green wall extends up to become a solid bannister for the sky-lit, upper-floor corridor, which runs between two bedrooms at the front, and the primary suite at the back. An additional bedroom is located in the basement, behind the garage.
Other colourful vertical surfaces are found in the living room, where one wall is painted pale dusty pink, and the primary suite’s bath that features a slightly darker shade closer to terracotta. Most of the remaining walls are white, and the floors throughout are light-toned oak, leaving the clients a neutral backdrop to add their touches through bold rugs and furniture pieces. Subtle details including the repetition of spherical light fixtures both inside and out help to tie the whole project together.
When granted full control over a home’s architecture, as in this case, Reigo & Bauer demonstrates an astute awareness of three-dimensional space, and an ability to manipulate it within tight restraints to fully optimize the conditions offered. The result is an exterior that’s unlike anything else on the street, yet still seems appropriate for its setting, and interiors that feel at once dynamic and balanced.
Neville Park House in Toronto, Canada – Property Information
Architect: Reigo & Bauer – https://www.corearchitects.com/
Project Name: Neville Park
Location: Toronto Ontario
Area: 2000 sf (185 m2)
Completion: 2023
Architecture & Interiors: Reigo & Bauer
Design Team: Merike Bauer, Stephen Bauer, Victoria Dragoni
Structural Engineer: Blackwell
Photography: Doublespace Photography
About Reigo & Bauer
Since its founding by Merike and Stephen Bauer in 2005, Reigo & Bauer has developed an extensive portfolio of contemporary architecture and interiors that includes new builds and ambitious renovations, primarily focused on the residential sector. The firm’s strikingly modern work represents a deeply informed evolution of traditional vernacular, often with sculptural massing that deftly reinterprets classical forms. The results are open yet defined interior spaces that allow for an understanding of the continuity of the space beyond.
Reigo & Bauer projects deliver a unified though highly varied aesthetic experience. Through restrained minimalism, design details are reduced to their most essential forms—simplified, rather than lessened—eliminating what’s unnecessary to strengthen what’s meaningful. This quiet background makes room for unexpected touches that reinforce, rather than compete with, one another; through the firm’s expert use of extended motifs and coordinated layers of detail, multiple design elements act as a single gesture.
Photographer: Doublespace Photography
Neville Park House, Toronto, Ontario residential project images / information received 271024 from v2com newswire
Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada, North America
Houses in Toronto
Contemporary Toronto Buildings
Contemporary Toronto Homes – selection from e-architect:
Whistling Wind Island Residences
Design: Akb Architects
photo : Doublespace Photography
Whistling Wind Island Residences
Everden Residence
Design: StudioAC
photo : Doublespace Photography
Everden Residence
Eglington W House
Design: StudioAC
picture : Doublespace Photography
Eglington W House
Stack House, Hill Toronto, ON, Canada
Design: Atelier RZLBD
photo : Borzu Talaie
Stack House, Forest Hill
Petaluma House, Whitby, Toronto GTA
Design: Trevor McIvor Architect Inc
image from architects studio
Petaluma House
Forest Hill Garden & Pavilion, Forest Hill neighbourhood
Design: Amantea Architects
photo : Doublespace Photography
Forest Hill Garden and Pavilion
August House
Design: Giaimo
photo : Doublespace Photography
August Toronto House Extension
Toronto Architecture
Toronto Architectural Designs – chronological list
Ontario Architecture News on e-architect
New Ontario Properties – recent selection from e-architect:
Sheridan College Hazel McCallion Campus Phase 2A, Downtown Mississauga
Design: Montgomery Sisam Architects in joint venture with Moriyama & Teshima Architects
Sheridan College Hazel McCallion Campus
SMYTHE, Summerhill district, north Toronto
Design: Ashley Botten Design and Tommy Smythe
SMYTHE flagship Store
Comments / photos for the Neville Park House, Toronto, Ontario residential project design by Reigo & Bauer page welcome.