Designlines

Everything New Is Old Again

How designer–builder Todd Mcmillan transforme­d a mid-century house into a more authentic version of itself

- By SIMON LEWSEN

Ben Homes transforms a mid-century bungalow into a this-century home

“A lot of people mistakenly associate modern architectu­re with coldness,” says Todd Mcmillan, co-founder of the Burlington design and constructi­on firm Ben Homes. Granted, some contempora­ry houses with boxy interiors, high ceilings and slick finishes can feel soulless, but traditiona­l mid-century modernism is anything but. Visit one of the great postwar residentia­l municipali­ties – New Canaan, Connecticu­t, or Palm Springs, California – and you’ll encounter an architectu­re of warm materials and human-scale proportion­s.

The Roseland community in Burlington could almost be one of those places, although many of its ’60s houses have since been outfitted with anachronis­tic touches, like gaudy Greek columns or blingy metal siding. When hunting for a more spacious home than they had in Toronto, Laird Kay, an aviation photograph­er, and Raymond Girard, a marketer and sculptor, passed through Roseland and were pleasantly surprised. “Burlington is charming,” says Kay, “like a suburban fantasy.” They bought a 110-square-metre bungalow and hired Ben Homes to renovate it.

Mcmillan and his team rebuilt the garage, turning it into an artist’s studio with terrazzo tile floors and exposed roof beams, but they preserved the adjacent volume – a gabled

abode with bedrooms in the front end and living space out back. A garage was built in front of the new studio, and the exterior of this arrangemen­t was re-bricked in grey to match the existing home. They clad the entire structure in shiplap cedar and set a courtyard out front, beneath a series of horizontal beams.

For the interiors, Mcmillan made several design decisions that, while uncommon today, would’ve been convention­al when the house was built. Rather than redoing the floors in ultra-modern broad planks, he refinished the original thin-plank oak. Rather than limiting himself to “neutral” materials and colours, he opted for teak panelling on the walls and muted green paint on the custom cabinetry. And, rather than crafting an open-concept main space, he preserved the partitions between the kitchen and living room and left the ceilings at their 2.5-metre height. Despite the modest proportion­s, the interiors feel expansive thanks to large windows overlookin­g the new backyard lap pool.

The home feels cozy but not stuffy, spacious but not cavernous, and respectful of history. “Mid-century design was all about giving people what they need,” says Mcmillan, “not more and not less.”

For Kay and Girard, finding Mcmillan was a godsend. The couple had interviewe­d several architects and developers before him but were repeatedly disappoint­ed. “They wanted to change everything,” says Girard. “But we didn’t want to start over. We wanted to take what was already there and make it better.” BENHOMES.CA

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 ??  ?? BELOW A custom teak library – by Ben Homes – spans the living room, shelving innumerabl­e volumes on art, design and photograph­y. Vintage rugs and marble coffee table; armchairs from The Bay; track lighting by Liteline.
BELOW A custom teak library – by Ben Homes – spans the living room, shelving innumerabl­e volumes on art, design and photograph­y. Vintage rugs and marble coffee table; armchairs from The Bay; track lighting by Liteline.
 ??  ?? ABOVE The dining room is cool and composed, with its walkout to the backyard and modern-era furnishing­s. The dining chairs and marble table are vintage; pendant by Pablo Design; photo by homeowner Laird Kay.
ABOVE The dining room is cool and composed, with its walkout to the backyard and modern-era furnishing­s. The dining chairs and marble table are vintage; pendant by Pablo Design; photo by homeowner Laird Kay.
 ??  ?? LEFT Peach-coloured ridged tiling from Ciot dresses the walls of this powder room, while repurposed quartz tops the vanity – a perfect match to the kitchen cabinetry. Pendant by Progress Lighting; Kohler sink; Hansgrohe faucet.
LEFT Peach-coloured ridged tiling from Ciot dresses the walls of this powder room, while repurposed quartz tops the vanity – a perfect match to the kitchen cabinetry. Pendant by Progress Lighting; Kohler sink; Hansgrohe faucet.
 ??  ?? ABOVE Viridian painted MDF cabinetry meets quartz countertop­s and the velvet upholstery of the banquette in the ’60s-esque kitchen. Progress Lighting pendant; Eames table from Filter; Jacques Guillon Cord Chair.
ABOVE Viridian painted MDF cabinetry meets quartz countertop­s and the velvet upholstery of the banquette in the ’60s-esque kitchen. Progress Lighting pendant; Eames table from Filter; Jacques Guillon Cord Chair.
 ??  ?? BELOW Accessible from the foyer and the new garage, the former garage (now an art studio) houses 265 bins of Lego with which homeowner Raymond Girard builds his mega metropolit­an structures, some sculptures reaching as high as 2.7 metres.
BELOW Accessible from the foyer and the new garage, the former garage (now an art studio) houses 265 bins of Lego with which homeowner Raymond Girard builds his mega metropolit­an structures, some sculptures reaching as high as 2.7 metres.
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 ??  ?? BELOW In the backyard – with grounds by Couture Landscapes and lap pool from Gib-san Pools – one can see how the original gabled portion of the house meshes with the lower, renovated section thanks to impeccable brick and siding.
BELOW In the backyard – with grounds by Couture Landscapes and lap pool from Gib-san Pools – one can see how the original gabled portion of the house meshes with the lower, renovated section thanks to impeccable brick and siding.
 ??  ?? RIGHT At the foot of the bed in the master bedroom is this retro vignette, which stars a wall-mounted desk from Hollace Cluny, as well as vintage curtains and art.
Learn more about this reno at dlm.ag/everything­new
RIGHT At the foot of the bed in the master bedroom is this retro vignette, which stars a wall-mounted desk from Hollace Cluny, as well as vintage curtains and art. Learn more about this reno at dlm.ag/everything­new
 ??  ?? ABOVE Like many of the home’s original features, the flooring in the street-facing master bedroom was refinished. Bench by Ben Homes; bedding from The Bay; vintage Pierre Cardin table lamps from Filter.
ABOVE Like many of the home’s original features, the flooring in the street-facing master bedroom was refinished. Bench by Ben Homes; bedding from The Bay; vintage Pierre Cardin table lamps from Filter.

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