Designlines

FULL TRANSPAREN­CY

An East End home unabashedl­y uses glass walls and a split-level floorplan to bring the outdoors in

- BY JEREMY FREED

There’s no mistaking Rudy Wallman’s house for his neighbours’. Situated among Riverdale’s Victorian and postwar homes, the translucen­t glass box was designed by Wallman – principal of Wallman Architects and a specialist in glass high-rise design – for his family of three. “We really wanted something that had no connection to the surroundin­g houses,” says Wallman. Freed from the constraint­s of peaked roofs and brick facades, and inspired by the iconic glass houses of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson, Wallman’s 320-square-metre home also maximizes outdoor space and interior light.

To make use of the small, sloping lot, Wallman spread the house over five levels, with the main floor set one metre below grade. “Unlike the houses on the street with porches, we did the opposite,” he says. “That allowed a more direct relationsh­ip to the overall landscape.” Not only does this split-level design make the most of the home’s modest footprint, it also allows light from the windows and skylights to penetrate deep into the structure.

Off the street, the front door opens into a galley-style kitchen. This leads to a double-height living room lit by a two-storey glass rear wall: the perfect perch to overlook the garden. A central staircase leads up to a second-storey office, which surveys the living room, and a bedroom that faces the street. The third floor, meanwhile, reveals a guest bedroom and a master suite, both illuminate­d by floor-toceiling windows. Another floor up, and through an operable skylight, the rooftop terrace provides panoramic views of downtown, Lake Ontario and the treetops of nearby Withrow Park.

Back on the street, the house’s glass facade transforms into a display case at night. To make allowances for neighbours and passersby, Wallman opted for glass treated with a translucen­t film and blackout curtains for nighttime privacy – essential in a house that attracts so much attention. No, Wallman’s glass box is not quite as transparen­t as Mies van der Rohe’s or Johnson’s, nor does it boast bucolic surroundin­gs. It does, however, succeed in creating some of the neighbourh­ood’s best views, both inside and out. WALLMANARC­HITECTS.COM

 ?? PHOTOS BY NAOMI FINLAY ??
PHOTOS BY NAOMI FINLAY
 ??  ?? RIGHT In the double-height living room: sofa from Roche Bobois; Boconcept floor lamp; Design Within Reach coffee table; painting by David T. Alexander; porcelain flooring from Stone Tile.
RIGHT In the double-height living room: sofa from Roche Bobois; Boconcept floor lamp; Design Within Reach coffee table; painting by David T. Alexander; porcelain flooring from Stone Tile.
 ??  ?? ABOVE From the sidewalk, visitors step a metre below grade into the foyer beside the galley kitchen. Built by R&R Woodwork, it features bookmatche­d anigre wood topped with Laminam from Stone Tile.
ABOVE From the sidewalk, visitors step a metre below grade into the foyer beside the galley kitchen. Built by R&R Woodwork, it features bookmatche­d anigre wood topped with Laminam from Stone Tile.
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 ??  ?? BELOW A bird’s-eye view from the rooftop patio – accessed by an operable skylight on the top level – reveals two outdoor living spaces: a deck off the living room, a garden off the basement. Furniture from Casualife.
BELOW A bird’s-eye view from the rooftop patio – accessed by an operable skylight on the top level – reveals two outdoor living spaces: a deck off the living room, a garden off the basement. Furniture from Casualife.

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