Play all audios:
ATELIER ÉCHELLE REIMAGINES QUÉBEC’S VERNACULAR BARN TYPOLOGY Atelier Échelle reinterprets the vernacular BARN architecture of rural QUÉBEC for a contemporary art collectors’ RESIDENCE.
Sitting on the west banks of Lake Memphremagog in Magog, Canada, the Lakeside Gallery Residence is a contemporary reinterpretation of the traditional barn volume typical to rural Québec. The
design repeats this prototypical form in four different articulations—an outdoor summer home, an indoor winter home, a living quarter, and a guest quarter. CEDAR roofs, BRICK walls, and
GLASS bridges tie the four volumes into one singular experience. This waterfront, six-bedroom residence is oriented to capture the striking views and sunsets over the serene lake. Designed
for an art collector-couple, it offers generous spaces to host family gatherings and entertain friends. Inside, a series of galleries and in situ installations are an inviting surprise to
discover and experience art that is seamlessly integrated with the architecture. Floor-to-ceiling exterior glass walls frame the natural landscape beyond, which serves as a dynamic backdrop
shifting with time and seasons. all images by Maxime Brouillet LAKESIDE GALLERY RESIDENCE SPLITS INTO FOUR DISTINCT VOLUMES THE ARCHITECTURAL TEAM at Atelier Échelle conceives the house as a
juxtaposition of four programmatically distinct volumes with unique purposes. Situated closest to the lake is a 100-foot-long outdoor summer terrace encompassing an exterior kitchen, al
fresco dining, a fireside lounge, and a heated pool. Just behind, the indoor winter home is an open plan comprising a kitchen, dining, living room, and music lounge. The living quarter
houses the primary suite, office, wine cellar, pantry, and powder room. The guest quarters are situated farthest from the lake and hold four bedrooms each with an ensuite bathroom, and a
guest lounge. Glass bridges and clerestory windows provide each volume with an abundance of indirect natural light to showcase the art and create informal thresholds between the spaces. The
Lakeside Gallery Residence is constructed in reinforced concrete, steel framing, and brick walls. A structural system was devised to install motorized glass spanning more than 55 feet to
capture an uninterrupted view of the Lake and the surrounding landscape. The 11-foot-tall wood entry door opens into an art gallery and frames the lake. The open-plan kitchen features fully
glazed windows in place of cabinetry, flooding the space with natural light. Atelier Échelle reimagines Québec’s vernacular barn forms into a modern lakeside residence INTERIOR BLENDS
NATURAL MATERIAL FINISHES WITH REFINED ART PIECES The natural material finishes both inside and out were carefully selected to age gracefully and slowly acquire a layer of patina to reflect
the passing of time. The exterior walls use dark-toned, water-struck clay bricks sourced from Denmark and the oversized roof shingles were custom-fabricated in a local workshop. The
stonework visible on the terrace, garden, exterior kitchen, and fireplace is a mix of locally sourced black and gray Cambrian granite. The interior kitchen island is a single, rough stone
block with a charred, live-edge walnut slab resting atop to achieve bar-height dining. A series of supporting spaces complete the chalet experience, from a cork-lined indoor gym to a
billiard room wrapped in deep blue corduroy drapery and a wine cellar specifically designed for Bourgogne wine. The wine cellar houses an excess of 1200 bottles, specifically biased toward
the unique shape of a Bourgogne bottle. The micro-fluted glass-and-bronze door gives into a space clad in white oak millwork compressed between a gravel floor and a bronze ceiling. Recessed
lighting and bronze mirrors dramatize the interior with a warm glow and reflections throughout. The powder room is lined on all sides with a custom mural representing the four seasons and
playfully collages events of the owner’s lives. An oil-rubbed bronze vanity stands in the center, lightly reflecting the mural tones. A second installation by the same artist conceptualizes
floating iceberg mosaics in contrast to the warm water of the heated pool. The residence was designed as the medium between the large, expansive views of the lake and a desire to be
surrounded by art. Walls were strategically positioned to avoid dividing the spaces while serving as a canvas for the owners’ growing art collection. the residence splits into four volumes,
a summer home, a winter home, a living quarter, and a guest quarter cedar roofs, dark brick walls, and glass bridges tie the home’s design into its natural surroundings floor-to-ceiling
glass walls frame ever-changing natural landscapes as dynamic backdrops for art and living the home is formed by reinforced concrete, steel framing, and dark-toned Danish clay bricks adding
character custom oversized roof shingles crafted locally ensure the residence ages gracefully with time clerestory windows and glass walls bring light into the spaces perfectly framing the
surrounding landscape the entry’s 11-foot-tall wood door opens into a gallery space framing lakeside views