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JOHN BROWN is the editor of theslowhome.com and the founder of the Slow Home Movement. He is a registered architect, real estate broker and Professor of Architecture at the University of Calgary.
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Flow, Light and Continuous Space
Exterior View
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Interior Living Space
Interior Living Space 2
Sliding Panel to Kitchen
Kitchen
Bedroom
Upper Bathroom
Ground Floor Plan
Upper Floor Plan
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This project included the renovation and addition of a 1970's house in West Vancouver. The existing
main floor plan, which consisted of a maze of small, dark rooms and dead-ended corridors, was opened
up to bring in natural light and create a flow and continuity to the space. Design decisions were heavily
influenced on the existing landscape and the desire to physically and visually connect the interior spaces
with the lush expanse of garden. To help facilitate this indoor/outdoor relationship, the new layout is
organized around a distinct north-south axis with glazed doors at each end, offering not only views and
access to the landscape, but effective cross ventilation when opened. Defined by new framed walls, the
axis also serves to divide the main public and private functions of the home. Intimacy and light levels can
be further manipulated by means of three 3' x 8' panels that slide the full length of the house along this
line, allowing the user to close off or open up spaces as they wish. Clad with coloured steel sheets, these
panels also serve as large magnet boards creating an ever-changing display of family postings and
artwork.
Upper floor renovations to the master suite centered on the popular modern notion of the bathroom as
a space of "retreat", "refuge" and "relaxation". To facilitate this experience, the bathroom is a tall
volume open to the sleeping area and located on the prominent southern side of the house. The shower
and tub are positioned to capture ample sunlight and views, and a new private deck, clad with clear
cedar, extends the bathroom space to the exterior, adding a further dimension to the modern bathing
experience.
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We believe that our homes and neighborhoods should be healthy, vibrant places that uplift the spirit and gracefully fit our needs. We call for an end to poor construction, bad design, misleading marketing, unfair lending practices and environmental neglect in the housing industry. We acknowledge our collective responsibility to create CLOSE, SIMPLE, LIGHT places to live that leave a positive legacy for future generations.
provides design focused information that homeowners can use to improve the quality of how and where they live. It takes its name from the slow food movement which arose as a reaction to the processed food industry. The sprawl of cookie cutter housing that surrounds us is like fast food - standardized, homogenous, and wasteful. It contributes to a too fast life that is bad for us, our cities, and the environment. In the same way that slow food raises awareness of the food we eat and how these choices affect our lives, Slow Home empowers you to take more control of your home and improve the quality of how you live while reducing your environmental impact and futureproofing the long term investment value of your home.
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