ELLE (Canada)

TWO OF A KIND

Canadian tastemaker­s—and identical twins—Byron and Dexter Peart have created homes for themselves in Montreal’s most famous building complex.

- Writer STEPHEN HEYMAN Photograph­er MAXIME BROUILLET Stylist MICHAEL GODMER

IT HAS BEEN MORE THAN a decade since Byron and Dexter Peart—identical twins and dapper darlings of the Canadian design world—bought condos in the Montreal housing complex Habitat 67. In that time, they have watched the brutalist building they call home morph from a point of reference for architectu­re aficionado­s into something like a national treasure.

In 2017, Canada Post honoured the building with a stamp. Shortly after, Moshe Safdie, who designed Habitat 67 when he was a 24-year-old architectu­re student at McGill University, renovated the top-floor unit he owns and opened it up to tour groups. Hardly a day goes by without the brothers noticing a curious visitor admiring the facade, which is made up of 354 interlocki­ng concrete blocks. “When something is a half-century old and people are taking pictures of it every morning while you’re having your coffee, it reminds you about the enduring potential of design done well,” says Dexter. “That challenges us so that everything we create has to meet that crazy standard.”

Habitat was built as a pavilion at the Expo 67 world’s fair, which attracted more than 50 million people to a city of under three million. A residentia­l prototype for the megalopoli­s of the future, it broke the monolithic apartment building into floating cubes interspers­ed with shafts of open space or elevated patios filled with herb gardens and fruit trees. The idea was †

to preserve the economy of apartment living while giving city dwellers some of the airiness and greenery of a detached house.

While popular among students of architectu­re, the building failed to usher in a new style of urban dwelling. And although it has roots as a template for affordable housing, Habitat—which is now a condominiu­m complex—has actually become one of the more exclusive addresses in Montreal. This is despite its relatively isolated location on a man-made peninsula in the St. Lawrence River, across from the city’s main port. Many of Habitat’s residents have retrofitte­d Safdie’s original single-unit apartments by buying two or three “cubes” and linking them to create spacious multi-level condos, which are flooded with natural light and boast sweeping views of downtown Montreal.

The Pearts grew up in an immigrant Jamaican family in suburban Ottawa. They popped up on the fashion world’s radar in 2000, when they opened Want Still, a tiny shop in Old Montreal that became the first place in Canada to import many recherché Swedish and Japanese designers. Next came Want Les Essentiels de la Vie, their own line of luxury bags and accessorie­s, which grew into a global force, sprouting shoe and apparel collection­s and boutiques in Tokyo, Vancouver and New York. Fairly priced and built to last, Want’s chic totes targeted a new kind of jet-setter with more minimalist taste.

Yet even as Want achieved new heights, the Pearts felt a strong desire to give back. “We wanted to create ladders of opportunit­y,” says Dexter. “Maybe it’s where we are in our lives, getting older. Maybe because we’re twins and we’ve always been super collaborat­ive. But we felt that in the future, the big trend was not going to be competitio­n but co-operation.” And as Black entreprene­urs, they knew from experience that too few openings exist for people of colour to get financing and exposure. “Our parents enshrined in us from a very early age that we were going to have to work harder as Black Canadians. Byron and I were lucky enough to find these little cracks and crevices of opportunit­y early on, but it’s never been lost on us that those chances are either not seen or not made available to so many others.”

In 2017, they sold Want, and two years later, they launched Goodee, a tightly curated online marketplac­e for housewares hand-picked by the brothers as much for their beauty as for their social and environmen­tal value. The inventory runs the gamut from a straw bicycle basket handwoven at a co-operative in Ghana to stylish children’s furniture upcycled from discarded †

plastic toys by Antwerp-based company ecoBirdy. The Peart brothers’ own units at Habitat have in some ways become laboratori­es for thoughtful, sustainabl­e design. Inside Byron’s twocube home, which he shares with his fashion-executive husband, Stefan Weisgerber (and a Beaglier puppy named Hugo), Goodee pillows—a collaborat­ion between the brand and the Ethical Fashion Initiative—and terracotta planters made by eco-friendly Danish line Skagerak share space with museum-quality furniture. Many of the Bauhaus-style pieces in the condo were sourced from dealers in Stefan’s native Germany.

Perfection­ists and students of design history, Byron and Stefan have gone out of their way to restore the original elements of Safdie’s interiors—from the kitchen cabinetry to the glass shelving and mirrored walls. The condo also showcases a serious art collection in the making, with an Andy Warhol silkscreen, a Richard Serra etching and a landscape by the Québécois painter Marc Séguin.

While Byron’s place feels more like a gallery, Dexter’s home, which he shares with his wife, Maria Varvarikos (the founder of the publicity firm ZOÏ Agency), is casual by comparison. Composed of three cubes, the large space is warmed up with souvenirs from vacations to India or Zakynthos (the Greek island where Maria’s family is from).

It is also enlivened by the presence of the couple’s two daughters, Kaya, 10, and Sierra, 7, who love everything about life at Habitat. When they’re not playing in the condo’s plant-filled solarium, which Dexter says doubles as an “arts and crafts-studio-slash-slime playroom,” Kaya enjoys strolling around the complex’s pyramid-shaped fountains. Meanwhile, Sierra likes riding her scooter across the second-floor plaza or stargazing on temperate nights on the building’s rooftop.

The Pearts have always found Habitat exceedingl­y livable, but the community—with its open-air corridors, decentrali­zed lobbies and isolated outdoor spaces—has seemed like a safe haven since the coronaviru­s outbreak. As Dexter and Byron gather their families each week for a socially distanced glass of wine, they count their blessings. “In this new reality, people are understand­ing what we’ve always known as twins: how important it is to be close to loved ones,” says Byron. In this respect, the mission of their new company—“good people doing good things”—feels of a piece with this moment. “I think Want was really about being out in the world. And Goodee is about coming home.” ®

 ??  ?? Byron’s living room and his puppy, Hugo. Opposite: Dexter’s dining room
Byron’s living room and his puppy, Hugo. Opposite: Dexter’s dining room
 ??  ?? Byron and Stefan’s bedroom. Opposite (clockwise, from top left): Habitat 67 in Montreal; Byron and Stefan; Byron’s dining area; Dexter and Maria
Byron and Stefan’s bedroom. Opposite (clockwise, from top left): Habitat 67 in Montreal; Byron and Stefan; Byron’s dining area; Dexter and Maria
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 ??  ?? Dexter and Maria’s bedroom
Dexter and Maria’s bedroom

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