“It was a double house, and a big open place betwixt them was roofed and floored, and sometimes the table was set there in the middle of the day – and it was a cool, comfortable place…”
—Mark Twain
This cottage reimagines the dogtrot, a 19th-century dwelling from the American Southeast, as a prototype for sustainable living in Ontario. Traditionally, the dogtrot linked two structures with a breezeway that functioned as both passage and gathering space. Here, that form becomes the foundation for a project that unites vernacular form, contemporary detailing, and rigorous sustainability.
Set on a small piece of tableland above a southern Ontario lake, the house negotiates the steep site by projecting forward rather than cutting into the land. The foundation negotiates the terrain, allowing the building to project outward and frame views of water and forest. Two gabled volumes are joined by a breezeway beneath a continuous roof: Eating, sleeping, and living areas, along with a loft that bridges above the passage, take advantage of the generous section. Between them, the breezeway acts as an outdoor room, shaded and communal in summer and adaptable in winter when the primary suite can be closed, concentrating activity to the larger side with the wood stove.
The adaptation to Ontario lies in the building’s envelope and its seasonal strategies. Prefabrication was not simply a construction technique but a design driver. Wall and roof panels were fabricated locally, delivered to site, and craned into place, ensuring speed, precision, and minimal environmental disruption. This process reduced waste, limited on-site impact, and enabled the continuity of the siding inside and out. It demonstrates a system that is scalable and replicable: a construction method aligned with the dogtrot’s adaptability as a housing prototype across diverse conditions.
Inside, the white painted pine siding mirrors the exterior cedar cladding, curving seamlessly from wall to roof. Against this continuous surface, the timber gable walls, painted in shades of blue and green, provide structural support and become the defining elements of each room. Their colour and figuration set off each gable as a distinct backdrop within the larger volume. The main windows on the long façades are dimensioned to match the breezeway, integrating light and view while reinforcing the dogtrot’s spatial rhythm.
Sustainability was integral to the design. Built to Passive House standards, the envelope includes double-stud walls with dense-pack cellulose insulation (R-40+), a roof insulated to R-60, and high-performance air and vapour barriers. Passive ventilation through skylights reduces the need for mechanical cooling. A compact, high-efficiency system—electric furnace, wood stove, heat recovery unit, and on-demand hot water—eliminates ductwork and simplifies performance.
DogTrot demonstrates how an inherited typology can be adapted to a northern climate with architectural clarity, structural innovation, and environmental responsibility. It offers a prototype for resilient, place-based design in Ontario’s cottage country that is familiar in form yet distinctly of its time.