Prospect,
Nova Scotia
Prospect,
Nova Scotia
The Martin-Lancaster house is a 3,000 square foot courtyard house, situated on the rugged Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia. It consists of four primary components: (1) a gabled garage/guest house, (2) a gabled social pavilion, (3) a north-facing private service bar, and (4) an arrival court between. The arrival sequence is a procession toward the sea; past the protective garage, down into the protected courtyard, along a bench, into the foyer, then into the double-height living pavilion, and onto a terrace above the sea. The south-facing social pavilion is anchored by a totemic concrete hearth.
The monolithic zero-detailed, local, cedar-shingled walls and roofs respond well to the frequent wet/ dry, freeze/thaw cycles of the labile marine climate. Clean curtain wall glazing allows the landscape to flow through the house. A heavy timber structure in the living pavilion signifies its social function.
The passive solar building strategy is extended to the interior through the use of an in-floor, hydronic radiation system. This is an abstract, highly restrained project which is an essay on the local material culture traditions of the place.
Awards
2010 Nova Scotia Lieutenant Governor’s Medal of Excellence
Design Team
Brian MacKay-Lyons
Etienne Lemay
Shane Andrews
Sawa Rostkowska
Marcin Sztaba
Photography
Greg Richardson
Structural Engineer
Campbell Comeau Engineering Limited
Builder
Doug Reid