Toronto Raptors – We The North

Qualifée pour les play-offs de la NBA où elle affronte les Brooklyn Nets dans la conférence Est, la franchise des Toronto Raptors nous offre avec « We The North » un spot jouant avec intelligence sur leur singularité – seule équipe canadienne présente à ce stade de la compétition – pour se distinguer et la montrer comme un territoire hostile.

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Roots XL Collection: Celebrating 40 years of classic sportswear with a heavyweight line made in Canada

Roots XL Collection


Classic pieces, done exceptionally well, are hard to beat—especially when it comes to sweats. After consistently releasing some of the best sportswear in the world (including several runs of Winter Olympics uniforms for their home nation Canada, as well as the US and…

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Williamson Chong’s House in Frogs Hollow burrows into the Ontario landscape

The lower storey of this house in Ontario by Toronto studio Williamson Chong Architects is wrapped by a concrete wall that burrows into a hillside, while the upper floor is an overhanging box clad with red-stained timber (+ slideshow).

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

Named House in Frogs Hollow, the residence is located on a 40-hectare rural estate on the edge of Georgian Bay, and was designed by Williamson Chong Architects for a pair of avid cyclists.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

Rather than positioning the house at a vantage point atop a hill, the architects chose a site at the base of the slope, allowing them to submerge part of the ground floor into the landscape of clay earth, grasses and hawthorns.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

This places the building within a network of pathways and bike trails, some of which were created by the clients, but also including routes used by native horses, or those taken by local residents on snowmobiles.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

“The house is not the final destination, but a stopping place within [the clients’] network of activity,” said the architects.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

One long concrete wall carves out a space for the house’s ground floor, lining the edge of an L-shaped plan that wraps and protects a terrace on the eastern side of the building.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

Wooden shiplap boards are arranged vertically across the walls of the boxy upper floor and have been stained with a linseed oil-based pigment to give them a dark red tone.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

“Designed as an undulating rhythm of varying widths, thin boards are CNC milled to a shallow depth while wider boards are milled with deep striations, casting long shadows that track the sun as it moves around the house,” explained the architects.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

Inside the house, a staircase is screened behind an undulating timber wall, leading up from a family living room and kitchen to three bedrooms on the top floor. The living room is also located upstairs and features three glazed walls.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

During the cold winter months the house is warmed throughout by underfloor heating and makes the most of solar gain with a series of large south-facing windows. A passive ventilation system helps to keep the house cool in summer without the need for air conditioning.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects

Photography is by Bob Gundu.

Here’s some information from Williamson Chong Architects:


House in Frogs Hollow

The House in Frogs Hollow, a 2000sf country retreat, is located on a long slope of the Niagara Escarpment overlooking Georgian Bay. The property is a collection of eroded clay hills and protected watershed zones blanketed with a dense field of hawthorn and native grasses. It is not picturesque, but tough and impenetrable.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image and key

The clients, who gather at the property throughout the year, are avid cyclists who spent months on the 100 acre property prior to construction cutting in discreet mountain biking trails and learning the paths of the horses and snowmobiles as they emerge from the community over the seasons. Because of their connection to the landscape, a primary site strategy was to resist the inclination to build on top of the hills where one could survey the property in its entirety and instead carve out a building area at the base of the hillside. The house is not the final destination, but a stopping place within their network of activity.

Carved into the landscape, the muscular tectonic of the long concrete wall figuratively clears the site for building while bridging the natural and tempered environments. The concrete has a toughness that mirrors the landscape, providing protection from the prevailing winter winds. During the summer months the wall provides patio shade, creating pools of cooler air that are passively drawn through the house.

Entry is at the west end of the concrete wall and into a service bar containing the stair, kitchen, office, bike workshop, storage room, and mechanical room. This functional zone serves as a backdrop to the glassed in living area that opens on three sides to an extended view of the rolling landscape.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects
First floor plan – click for larger image and key

The second level hovers above the concrete wall and living space. It contains the bedrooms, bathrooms, and family room in a tight wrapper of customised shiplap siding. Designed as an undulating rhythm of varying widths, thin boards are CNC milled to a shallow depth while wider boards are milled with deep striations, casting long shadows that track the sun as it moves around the house. The siding is stained with a linseed oil based iron oxide pigment that requires reapplication only once every 15 years.

The first and second floors are connected by a figured stair enclosure. This digitally fabricated element is designed to filter light from the clerestory volume above. At the ground floor it carves into the area below its upper run to gather more space at the entry and allow for a seating area.

The house’s connection to the land is reinforced not only in its architectural form, but also in its environmental footprint. The house is heated with radiant floor loops that supplement the passive winter heat gain from south-facing windows. In addition, there is no mechanical cooling. Instead, the stair tower and operable windows facilitate passive ventilation that draws cool air through the house from shaded exterior areas. Natural materials and pigments were used throughout and a small square footage was maintained to further reduce construction costs and keep future energy consumption to a minimum.

Frogs Hollow by Williamson Chong Architects
Long section – click for larger image and key

Total Floor Area: 2000 sqft
Design Team: Betsy Williamson, Partner Shane Williamson, Partner Donald Chong, Partner Kelly Doran, Maya Przybylski
Structural Engineering: Blackwell Bowick Partnership Ltd.
Construction Management: Wilson Project Management Inc.
Millwork: Speke Klein Inc.
Siding Fabrication: Tomek Bartczak, Gavin Berman, Peter Odegaard, Taryn Sheppard, Byron White
Stair Fabrication: Byron White, Jeff Powers

The post Williamson Chong’s House in Frogs Hollow
burrows into the Ontario landscape
appeared first on Dezeen.

Word of Mouth: Toronto: Axe throwing, meaty meals, sprawling parks and street art in Canada’s cultural hub

Word of Mouth: Toronto


Much more than just Canada’s most populous city, Toronto bustles with international and culturally affluent inhabitants, alongside plenty of surprises. We once explored its soul food scene, but that’s just one aspect of the city’s stellar dining options. There are outdoor parks…

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Interview: Gary Taxali: The multi-media artist discusses balancing commercial and personal work and the perils of a blank white page

Interview: Gary Taxali


Art and commerce are traditionally thought of as opposing forces. Of course, this is especially true for artists who’s work lands on both advertisements and gallery walls. Finding inspiration from commercial work while maintaining a sense of integrity in the art world is…

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Trout Rainwear: Attractive, technical outerwear for women, designed in Toronto and made in Vancouver

Trout Rainwear


While visiting the Westcomb factory in Vancouver, BC earlier last month we happened upon a stack of classic-looking raincoats being sewn by hand. After further inspection, it was revealed that…

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Abandoned Places by Bart Synowiec

Basé à Toronto, le photographe Bart Synowiec aime capturer et immortaliser des lieux et environnements oubliés, désaffectés et laissés à l’abandon. Avec une grande attention au détail, l’artiste propose de superbes images, jouant avec talent sur le contraste entre les traces de l’homme et son absence.

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Soma Chocolatemaker: Canada’s premier chocolatier offers single-origin decadence and seasonal creations

Soma Chocolatemaker


There’s something about cold weather and comfort food that go hand-in-hand and any excuse to enjoy more chocolate is a welcome one, so it was a pleasure to indulge in some of the best from Toronto’s …

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Bicycles Installation in Toronto

Déjà auteur de l’installation « Forever Bicycles » diffusée sur Fubiz en début d’année, l’artiste chinois Ai Wei Wei a exposé une nouvelle version de celle-ci à Toronto. De superbes images de cette installation et de cette sculpture géante composée de plus de 3144 vélos, sont à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Typographic Mural by Ben Johnson

Ben Johnson a crée un mur en typographie pour Project:Rhino, un espace de co-working dans le centre de Toronto. La vidéo en noir et blanc réalisée par Asterisk Media montre l’artiste en plein processus créatif, du croquis à la réalisation de la fresque à la peinture et au marqueur. Un très beau projet en images et en vidéo.

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