Vancouver Sun

ON THE ISLAND: IT’S ALL ABOUT THE FINISHINGS

Victoria waterfront home boasts clean lines and craftsmans­hip in the extensive millwork

- GRANIA LITWIN

Sheri Fraser knew what appliances she wanted in her kitchen long before she and her husband ever started building their new Beach Drive home in Victoria. She also had a pretty good idea of how her kitchen was going to look and function.

“I found a picture of a kitchen and ripped it out ... as inspiratio­n,” said Sheri, who noted they had never built a house, but had renovated previous homes.

Before she and husband John gave a thought to hiring an architectu­ral designer or builder, they had decided to work with Victoria interior designer Sandy Nygaard, whose clean, uncluttere­d lines and understate­d chic appealed to them.

“We’d used Sandy in previous renovation­s and she had us pegged,” said Sheri with a laugh. “She just gets it. She creates the flow, the style. She’s wonderful.”

Nygaard said it helps when clients know their own minds and have clear vision and well defined aspiration­s. “It’s wonderful — a huge help.”

When the Frasers found their ideal property on Beach Drive, their first move was to tear down an existing older home. Over 14 months, their new house took shape with the help of Zebra Design Group’s Rus Collins and the building team at Abstract.

The kitchen was critical for Sheri, who wanted a big island that would double as a kitchen table. “It’s where we eat dinner most nights,” so it has a generous overhang, and tall comfortabl­e chairs — not backless stools for temporary perching.

“Sandy was our saviour and came up with lots of great ideas,” she said — such as installing an inconspicu­ous television over the desk area, putting pewter- coloured mesh on some of the cupboard door fronts as an alternativ­e to glass and adding extra windows.

She also eked out every molecule of extra space.

“We have so much storage in the house, it’s ridiculous,” Sheri said.

One of Nygaard’s little touches was to create a jewelbox pantry that isn’t simply a series of shelves and cupboards, but more a kitchen in miniature, with matching small counters covered in marble.

Sheri wanted her prep area and big sink by the window, not on the island as in her last house, where it always looked messy. Cuttings and clutter are kept off to the side, so it doesn’t become a focal point in the room. The island chairs are covered in a handsome buffed nubuck.

The living room and entry have soaring ceilings — more than 20 feet high — and scooped- barrel treatments on either side, adding an exclamatio­n mark of interest over windows and doors.

Carpenters from Hobson Woodworks did almost all the millwork in the 5,200- squarefoot home in the Uplands neighbourh­ood — including stair banisters, wainscotti­ng, interior trim, wall panelling, windowsill­s, pillars and an arched colonnade that divides the living room from the entry and supports a long balcony above.

“We spent about 1,300 man hours because there was quite a bit of detail required to pull off the look Sandy was going for: traditiona­l with a bit of contempora­ry edge,” said Hobson owner Geoff Hobson.

“We clad the pillars out, adding layers and layers of intricacy to make them pop in 3- D. Sandy gave us the renderings. We met on site with carpenters and ran with it.

“The difference between a plain pillar and one of these is night and day,” he said, noting it is satisfying to take a plain, structural post and make it “extraordin­ary.”

“I love that colonnade. ... It’s one of my favourite aspects of any house we’ve done ... with that nice tight sightline that your eye takes in all at once.”

He said the house was a satisfying project, because his heart is in finish carpentry.

“I really like trim- heavy houses.”

“Modern lines come in and out of fashion, but most carpenters will tell you they have their heart in this kind of thing,” said Hobson, a 35- yearold finishing carpenter, who recently opened a cabinet facility.

He specialize­s in high- end cabinetry and millwork, everything from suspended staircases to pine cabinetry and custom moulding.

“Since opening, it’s been full steam ahead. We were booked two to three months out before we even opened the door.”

Sheri and John appreciate the detailed craftsmans­hip that went into the extensive millwork in their three- storey house.

“I’m not a fancy or ornate person,” Sheri said, “but I really love the interiors that Sandy designed, and the fact that it has been so well done. This house is so comfortabl­e.”

John enjoys the media room and his library office on the main floor.

Located opposite each other, at the end of the colonnade, they are both entered through double glass doors off the hall, which means they can open up into one large area for entertaini­ng.

“We could have done french doors, or frosted doors, but that would have looked too traditiona­l,” said Sandy, who chose large panes of clear glass instead.

She selected a shade of dark brown- grey paint in both rooms, too, to link them and add a snug ambience, “so people tuck in.”

Dark wood was used in both rooms, for cabinets and shelving, and in the media room, a massive 80- inch television fades completely into the dark.

“It’s a really simple trick to build it into a dark background,” said Nygaard, who added the home is a combinatio­n of contempora­ry and traditiona­l styles.

“We have all the traditiona­l aspects to it, but they are done with a clear contempora­ry line.”

Nygaard works for many architects and home designers who send her digital plans to work from.

She often moves things around, changes a focal point here or there, puts in an extra window or makes suggestion­s to flow, layout and lighting.

The living room and entry were tough to light, Nygaard said.

“There was no obvious place to hang a chandelier because of the soaring ceiling, yet it is a grand entry and needed something dramatic.”

She solved the problem by hanging not one but three glittering spheres that hover over the upper balcony like planets spinning in a series of solar systems.

“This was another one of her moments,” said Sheri, referring to lights in the living room on either side of the fireplace.

“We saw something like them in Restoratio­n Hardware, but they weren’t quite right so Sandy made these.”

The designer took some metal pickets intended for an interior stairwell and had custom shades made for them.

“You need a team to make a house really great,” said Nygaard.

She added that she believes in bringing in designers from outside the architectu­ral firm or structural design company, so there is a fertile interplay of ideas.

 ??  ?? The living room, right, which overlooks the waterfront, has a half- moon window high up toward the ceiling. It matches a similar half moon over the entry at the front of the house. The dining area, bottom left, features water views through the trees,...
The living room, right, which overlooks the waterfront, has a half- moon window high up toward the ceiling. It matches a similar half moon over the entry at the front of the house. The dining area, bottom left, features water views through the trees,...
 ?? PHOTOS: DEBRA BRASH/ TIMES COLONIST ?? The kitchen, inspired by one the owner saw in a magazine, boasts a large island ( with comfortabl­e chairs) that doubles as a dining table.
PHOTOS: DEBRA BRASH/ TIMES COLONIST The kitchen, inspired by one the owner saw in a magazine, boasts a large island ( with comfortabl­e chairs) that doubles as a dining table.
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 ?? PHOTOS: DEBRA BRASH/ TIMES COLONIST ?? Homeowner Sheri Fraser, left, says her designer Sandy Nygaard ‘ just gets it’. Millwork is among the features that first catch the visitor’s eye. Wood panelling, stairway banisters and imposing wooden columns dominate the entrance hall, seen lower...
PHOTOS: DEBRA BRASH/ TIMES COLONIST Homeowner Sheri Fraser, left, says her designer Sandy Nygaard ‘ just gets it’. Millwork is among the features that first catch the visitor’s eye. Wood panelling, stairway banisters and imposing wooden columns dominate the entrance hall, seen lower...
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