The complete transformation of this unassuming single-storey worker’s cottage in Toronto’s historic "Tiny Town" turned a run-down house into a luminous and ethereal pandemic refuge. The client, Laurel Hutchison, was a retired schoolteacher on a fixed income, with a budget earmarked for basic renovations that would rescue her 112-year old home from disrepair. The result is a 720sqft, carefully proportioned light-filled home built on its original foundations while re-envisioning every other aspect of the worker’s cottage vernacular – a turn-of-the-century housing typology that has almost completely disappeared from the city.
Context
Craven Road represents an unusual urban condition. Previously known as Erie Terrace, the street was originally developed as a “shacktown” just beyond the city limits, housing lower-income labourers and immigrants in the early 20th century. With small dwellings lining only the street’s east side and a municipal fence running along the west, this atypical thoroughfare earned the moniker “Tiny Town” for having Toronto’s highest concentration of detached homes under 500 sf. Today, Craven Road remains a close-knit community and unique architectural outpost in an increasingly unaffordable city.
Construction & Community
The project began with the goal of maintaining the original home’s single-storey footprint as a critical part of an aging-in-place strategy for Laurel. To achieve this without undergoing a lengthy municipal approvals process of unknown outcome that would force Laurel to leave her home longer than she could afford to, the house needed to be designed and permitted as a renovation. However, shortly after the builder mobilised on site, it was discovered that the top course of the foundation required reconstruction. To do this work would typically have entailed taking down the walls above the foundation, but this would have run counter to the City’s inflexible regulations, which required that a minimum of 50% of the exterior walls remain in place for a project to qualify as a “renovation” versus a “new build”. The solution; a temporary shoring system that suspended the home’s above-ground shell in the air, giving the trades access to the foundation so it could be repaired, while satisfying the building inspector’s requirement that at least 50% of the house’s original walls remained upright. This was made possible in part by the generosity of a neighbour who allowed the builder to use their rear concrete terrace as a buttress for anchoring a temporary shoring wall.
Reinvention of the Typology and the Client Brief
With the original footprint intact, and heights of walls, roof angles, and window-to-wall percentages strictly pre-determined, the design process entailed a careful study of the existing worker's cottage typology in order to be able to de-construct, subvert, transform, re-interpret and re-construct the home in a completely modern way. The main design strategies included flipping the programme along the plan's long axis, re-orienting the home toward an intimate south-facing courtyard, and creating a sense of compression and expansion by reinventing the roof's traditional gable as a 36-foot long sawtooth clerestory, shifted and bisected to flood the home with natural light and fresh air. Additional apertures were re-introduced strategically to pull in light from various directions, seamlessly connect the interior to its small garden, and pull in light from all directions while obscuring direct views into the home from the outside. Together, these formal and phenomenological strategies create a sense of a highly animated, ever-unfolding space that defies the physical boundaries of the 720sf home.
These design decisions were a direct response to the client's mandate: a desire for abundant light, peacefulness, and relative sense of seclusion from her busy urban surroundings. As a result, and in response to this desire for inspired solitude – where one can be alone but feel connected at the same time – the home is transformed into a vessel of light and shadow, where the two almost seem to inhabit the space, going about their day alongside Laurel. To further emphasize this, the 16 foot tall interior facade of the home's north wall, which forms an otherwise blank backdrop to the home’s main living spaces, acts as a projection screen for the ever-changing colour, glow and shadow of the passing day and seasons, including the dappled light and arboreal silhouettes of the mature urban forest to the west in the late afternoon sun.
Aging-In-Place, Affordability and Maintenance
The home consists of four rooms: a combined entry, living, dining, and kitchen space; a small den large enough to accommodate a single bed; a combined washroom/laundry room; and a principal bedroom. This straightforward program was amplified by a robust aging-in-place strategy that integrated a U-shaped kitchen for easy circulation; curbless wetroom suitable for accessibility equipment with walls blocked for future grab bars; LED lighting and robust finishes to promote low maintenance and energy bills; sleeping space for a potential live-in caregiver; and a front porch designed to accommodate a future ramp, with a canopy that protects against weather.
To stretch every dollar and ensure that the house would be easy to build, hardwearing, energy efficient, and simple and economical to maintain over the years to come, ordinary and easily obtainable materials and salvaged fixtures were sourced. This included corrugated steel with a Galvalume finish for the exterior cladding and roofing, prefinished wood floors, porcelain pool tile for the bathroom, led lighting, and second-hand appliances.
Sustainability
The design for this 720-sf home made use of every element of the space and budget to minimize energy consumption through the implementation of a high-performance envelope, high-efficiency equipment, and energy-efficient fixtures; redeploying the original foundation and shoring system to avoid sending carbon-intensive concrete to landfill; and leveraging passive heating, cooling, ventilation, and natural lighting through the strategic implementation of volumes, orientation, apertures and exterior planting.
The south-facing clerestory glazing was considered in parallel with the mechanical designer’s development of the energy model. The energy performance benefited greatly from the placement and orientation of the clerestory windows, with significant passive solar gain during the winter months, accounting for almost a quarter of the home’s space heating energy requirements.
Conclusion
Anya Moryoussef sought out to address the following: How can you respect the street’s vernacular fabric and cultural history while reimagining the worker’s cottage typology to create a restorative and hyper-functional home? How do you build “small” affordably, and sustainably while also prioritizing uplifting design that supports psychological health and aging-in-place? How do you work within rigid municipal renovation requirements while effectively rebuilding the home from the foundation up? The light-filled home, small but expansive spaces, was described by renowned national architecture critic Alex Bozikovic as “a simple idea, constructed with ordinary building materials — but a beautiful idea that’s executed beautifully.”