Designlines

Everything Counts

- by SIMON LEWSEN

When building a custom mid-century-inspired home in Burlington, the Mcmillans had only themselves to please

When creating a bespoke home in Burlington, the Mcmillans obsessed over the tiniest details. After all, they were building for the perfect clients

In 2017, Kristen and Todd Mcmillan bought an investment property a few blocks from their Burlington home. Kristen, a designer, and Todd, a builder/designer, run the company Ben Homes. They planned to build a boutique house for the resale market. Colleagues in the real estate industry told them that to get the highest returns, they’d need to outfit the place with specific features: four bedrooms, a double-car garage, a gas fireplace and maintenanc­e-free cladding.

But they ignored this advice. The Mcmillans are mid-century modernists; they like subtle, well-appointed spaces. “We thought, ‘Let’s just do what we want,’” says Todd. “Then, we’ll find a like-minded buyer.”

Earlier that year, the couple and their two young kids had made a pilgrimage to New Canaan, Connecticu­t, where Todd’s architectu­ral heroes – the Harvard Five, whose members included Marcel Breuer and Eliot Noyes – built their iconic postwar homes. The facade of the Burlington house flaunts this influence, with its whitewashe­d brick and horizontal wood beams. Fronting the exterior courtyard is a wall made of ledgerock, another favourite material of the New Canaan set. This element isn’t merely decorative, though; it enabled the Mcmillans to install large, street-facing windows in the home without underminin­g privacy.

The interiors – an open-concept main floor on a 140-square-metre footprint and a second floor with three bedrooms and a study – have a distinctly Scandinavi­an feel, thanks to the textured surfaces and wood-burning fireplace. The couple committed to a simple palette of drywall, white-painted brick and vertical-grain Douglas fir, and Todd personally inspected each plank of wood to ensure it was virtually knot-free. Evidence of his obsessiven­ess can be found elsewhere in the home, from the ceilings, done without bulkheads, to the door jambs, window frames and stair nosings, which are all a mere 15.88 millimetre­s proud of the drywall. “It helps that my big brother, Chad, is my site supervisor,” says Todd. Whenever tradespeop­le attempted to cut corners, a Mcmillan family enforcer (including Todd’s dad) would set things right.

Kristen drew the millwork – discreet cabinetry made of tactile fir – before having it manufactur­ed in Todd’s shop. She describes her interior-design style as minimalist but soft. (The couple’s furniture collection includes a Herman Miller couch and an Eames armchair, both topped with plush cushions and blankets.) The labour was exacting, but it paid off. The home has a mathematic­al purity to it, yet the finishes radiate warmth.

It was only when they’d completed this intensive build that the Mcmillans acknowledg­ed what they’d both been thinking. “We just loved the house so much we couldn’t sell it,” says Kristen. So, they moved in. They’d been building for the ideal clients, not realizing it was them all along. BENHOMES.CA

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