Ottawa Magazine

GREAT SPACE: SCREEN TIME

How one Stittsvill­e family gets the most out of summer

- BY SARAH BROWN

Bungalow meets cottage

at Todd and Sarah Sinclair’s home in Stittsvill­e. And in a thoughtful family home that blends craftsman traditions with modern touches, it’s the 12-by-15-foot screened-in porch that stands out as a unique solution to the perennial summer mosquito issue. Not surprising, then, that this design feature is gaining momentum in this Ottawa suburb where Todd, the owner of TimberCros­s Homes, has already built three houses with rustic screened porches and has another four planned for upcoming builds this summer.

“We use our house as a model home to show potential clients what we can do,” says Todd. “Often they don’t even know they want a porch till they see ours.”

Eastern white cedar is his wood of choice, for both aesthetic and practical reasons. Locally milled in Lanark, the cedar is a classic cottage building material and is naturally rot-resistant. Todd stains it to further boost its longevity. Inside, two walls are faced with cedar and two with Maibec, a stained pine siding that matches the siding used on the front porch.

Last summer, their first in the house, Sarah says they practicall­y lived on their new porch. It was a place to play on rainy days, a quiet spot to enjoy a morning cup of coffee, an office for mum and dad in the evenings, and a bug-free hangout when friends stopped by for a barbecue. “When 6 p.m. rolls around, most people are disappeari­ng into their houses to get away from the mosquitoes, but we’re still enjoying the outdoors,” says Todd.

Two steps lead from the porch to a rectangula­r patio of interlocki­ng brick. The couple made the conscious decision to avoid a raised deck so that their young children could run (and ride their trikes) from patio to grass without fear of falls. Sarah says she often sets up a water table for daughter Peyton, 5, and son Blake, 3, to splash around at, and they sometimes cover the patio with a synthetic plastic sheet to turn it into a mini hockey rink.

Todd built the outdoor seating set out of a solid ash beam he recovered from a barn that once stood at the corner of Eagleson and Fallowfiel­d roads. When Todd helped the farm’s owners dismantle the structure, he kept some of the larger beams to use in future builds.

Though this rustic-modern house fits on a narrow suburban lot, the main view from the screened-in porch is of green grass and a wall of trees across the end of the Sinclairs’ backyard. As the sun sets and the neighbourh­ood grows quiet, that porch transforms into a retreat — a compact room that recreates the essence of cottage life.

 ??  ?? Below: The Maibec stained pine siding matches the siding at the front of the house
Below: The Maibec stained pine siding matches the siding at the front of the house
 ??  ?? Left: Cedar is naturally rot-resistant, but Todd stained it to further increase its longevity
Left: Cedar is naturally rot-resistant, but Todd stained it to further increase its longevity
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