Calgary Herald

House has rooms with a view

Windows guide eye across Juan de Fuca Strait

- GRANIA LITWIN AND FRANCES LITMAN

Elka Nowicka and Paul Pallan have a room with a view at the top of Victoria’s King George Terrace.

In fact, their spacious living room has not merely one, but a succession of views — each framed by a window that captures a unique slice of sea or sky.

The visual compositio­n runs from floor to ceiling along the front of the house.

It channels the eye across Juan de Fuca Strait, as if the whole outside world were one great gallery.

It’s perfect for Nowicka, who is an artist and finds herself happily gazing out at perfectly framed views wherever she looks.

She and Pallan bought the former cottage in Victoria’s Oak Bay 3 1 /2 years ago. While they lived there for the first year and enjoyed the 170-degree panoramas, they felt the small windows didn’t do it justice.

When they hired designer Bruce Wilkin to oversee a major renovation to the 1950s home, one of the first things he did was explain their view isn’t just about water and shoreline. It’s also about sky. He recommende­d doubling the living room height and stacking the windows in banks of three.

It’s a signature Wilkin treatment and the motif repeats itself throughout this house in not only windows, but also the main staircase where open rectangles line the stairwell.

This device allows light to pass through and expands sight lines on the main floor.

“I do a lot of big, stacked windows,” said Wilkin.

“They are simple, but grand. And I think the combinatio­n of a more compressed view puts the windows in a more human scale, rather than having one great sheet of glass that can be overwhelmi­ng.”

What he likes best about a “stack” is each segment frames a different view. He also repeated the effect in the dining room with

The Victoria home of Elka Nowicka and Paul Pallan has sweeping views of Juan de Fuca Strait. nine smaller-dimension windows.

“There is something about repetition and pattern that’s very appealing. It’s like being inside a camera with a big viewing box.”

Pallan was the one who first pictured living in this house. “It was almost a no-brainer because of the exposure.”

The site is ideal for watching sunsets as well as sunrises, not to mention the ever-changing ocean traffic, racing sailboats, cruise ships, as well as dark scudding clouds, ever-shifting weather structures in the sky.

At first, Nowicka didn’t even want to peek inside the ordinarylo­oking house, but it soon caught her imaginatio­n, too.

On the main floor, which covers 2,400 square feet, the renovation expanded up, but not out.

Upstairs, an additional 600 square feet allowed for an office for Pallan, who retired in 2003 from his job as Children’s Commission­er for B.C.

Bored by retirement, he now works as a private consultant.

“This office is so bad,” he says, jokingly. “I had every intention of using it for all my work, but I get so distracted ... I start to gaze outside and before I know it, I lose my train of thought. If I need to do serious work, I go to my downtown office.”

The renovated house feels spacious, peaceful and quiet, he says. “It’s our sanctuary.”

One of the couple’s favourite spots to watch the sun set is a second-floor viewing platform that soars above the living room like a crow’s nest.

Nowicka, who works at home, has a similar view from her studio: “It’s a very happy, stimulatin­g environmen­t. We both love the light and open space.”

Pallan estimates the total renovation cost close to $500,000 — “and the meter’s still ticking” — but he says it was money well spent since a new house would have cost about $800,000.

“It was worth every penny, even though it ended up being way more expensive than we anticipate­d,” says Nowicka. “We ended up gutting and rebuilding about threequart­ers of the house.”

They added high-energyeffi­cient windows, so even though the hilltop is exposed and windy, the house is warm.

“Any little bit of sunlight almost acts like a prism, capturing the sun and heating the house,” says Pallan. “In the summer, on the hottest day, there is always a breeze and we have good cross ventilatio­n.”

One reason the project turned out well is that they took their time planning the redesign and lived in the house for more than a year while discussing options.

“And Nowicka is very creative and open to new ideas,” says Wilkin.

His biggest challenge was combining something “incredibly minimal and modern with a 1950s-style bungalow. Nowicka didn’t want the addition to be a slave to the past or even informed by it.

“So we blew out the existing front of the house and took down a huge fireplace in the middle which gave a big disconnect between the kitchen and living rooms. We made that front box two storeys high, and created the lookout above the living room.”

‘It’s a viewing platform that creates a little bit of scale and hangs in space like a jagged point.

“It almost feels like you are in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, standing in one of the glass hallways,” says Wilkin.

“We brought the second storey forward so you can look out from the master bedroom, which previously had no view ... and moved a weird staircase off the kitchen, which also obstructed the view.”

One of the most dramatic new elements is a long, white cabinet suspended between two structural posts between the kitchen and dining room.

It solved the problem of two lonesome pillars in the middle of the room, says Wilkin.

Victoria-based craftsman Jason Good made all the cabinets, including this one with its unique front door cutaways for art display.

“I don’t give up control easily, but Jason said trust me and went ahead and built this — which I now think is fabulous,” says Nowicka.

It is rosewood inside, with maple boxes set into the cabinet and Caesarston­e quartz on top.

“The kitchen started when I bought this Ferrarired range,” she says gleefully.

“It’s a Blue Star with six burners, all gas, very powerful. Jason did all the cabinets and made huge drawers to fit my china from Poland.”

Good added a slim, red cupboard for breakfast items such as mugs and cereal bowls, and above the sink Wilkin added a strong red line, for a Mondrian touch (the Dutch artist was known for his bold horizontal­s and verticals in primary colours.)

“Every good painting has a stroke of red in it,” says Wilkin. “It’s an artist’s trick.”

Nowicka — who sells paint- ings at West End Gallery in Victoria and Edmonton, Canada House Gallery in Banff and Shayne Gallery in Montreal — agrees. Splashes of scarlet abound on most of her canvases and in her decor.

She is fearless when it comes to designing the interiors, whether it’s placing a glass-topped zebra table in her kitchen nook or putting a round of glass on an old Indonesian piece for a dining table. Her coffee table is a copy of an Italian one she saw for $3,000.

She replicated it with a table she found at Value Village for $30, which she covered with two layers of glass, fitted with mirror orbs in between.

A long corridor downstairs is lined with rows of cupboards built to hold white wardrobes from IKEA.

In the master bedroom, she made unfussy curtains from duvet covers with vertical sandy trim.

“It’s quite a wonderful, func- tional house,” says Wilkin. “The kind of place that reveals itself immediatel­y ... not much is hidden in this space.”

 ?? Photos, Frances Litman, Victoria Times Colonist ??
Photos, Frances Litman, Victoria Times Colonist
 ??  ?? Inspiratio­n isn’t hard to find in Nowicka’s home-based artist studio.
Inspiratio­n isn’t hard to find in Nowicka’s home-based artist studio.
 ??  ?? The 1950s-era home recently underwent a major renovation.
The 1950s-era home recently underwent a major renovation.
 ?? Photos, Frances Litman, Victoria Times Colonist ?? The dining area, right, is near the living room, which faces a huge wall of windows.
Photos, Frances Litman, Victoria Times Colonist The dining area, right, is near the living room, which faces a huge wall of windows.
 ??  ?? Elka Nowicka in her home.
Elka Nowicka in her home.

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