Western Living Magazine
Reimagine Remodelling with Kitchen Canvas
Protected: Merit Kitchens: Urban Cool Meets West Coast Warmth
Finalists Announced: HAVAN Professionals Inspire
One of BC’s Best Wineries Is Having a Bonkers Sale
Recipe: Balsamic Strawberry Sponge Cake from Oh Sweet Day
Recipe: The Perfect Blueberry Scones for Springtime
I Had the Best Nap of My Life in an Anti-Gravity Pod
Editors’ Picks: The Best Trips We Took in 2022
Victoria Might Just Be the Perfect Pre-New Year’s Getaway
The Future of Beauty: How One Medical Aesthetics Clinic is Changing the Game
Trending Now: The Best New Furniture and Homewares for Spring
Sleep Tight, Whatever Your Size: This Mattress Company Embraces All Body Types
Designers of the Year 2023: These Are Your Fashion Design Judges
Designers of the Year 2023: Introducing Our Furniture Design Category Judges
Designers of the Year 2023: Meet Your Maker Judges
The team at Falken Reynolds creates a space that celebrates this Vancouver condo's historyand future.
When Chad Falkenberg and Kelly Reynolds of Falken Reynolds Interiors were approached to renovate this condo in Vancouver’s Yaletown neighbourhood, they had a bit of a home-team advantage: the duo had already renovated a different unit in the historic 1910 building a few years earlier. It also meant they knew there was interior design gold hidden under the drywalled, low-ceilinged cookie-cutter condo that stood before them. Board-form concrete walls, original brick—it all just needed to be revealed.
That said, each unit within the building is a little bit different, and it wasn’t until they started peeling back the layers of renovations that the team could be truly delighted by what they were findin—like the 11 feet of height disguised by the low drop ceilings. “It was one of those things where you looked up as the ceiling was coming down,”” explains Falkenberg, “and you thought, this is too good to be true.”
The homeowners, a couple with four rambunctious dogs, had purchased a second unit in the building after living in their original space for a number of years, and they reached out to the Falken Reynolds team to combine both suites and create one great design that could showcase their extensive art collection. “They also knew there was a lot of history in the building—and they absolutely love it,” says Falkenberg, whose team worked with Lightfoot Contracting on the project.
“Every layer that we peeled off, they got so excited,” says Reynolds. “It was almost like an archeological site.”
That layered dig through the eras meant a shift in the design itself, too. “There was an initial design, and then we did the demolition, and everything changed as soon as we saw some of the opportunities in the building,” says Falkenberg. “Those buildings are just so structurally complicated. They were built one way in the early 20th century, and then a lot of them went through a big renovation in the ’40s and ’50s. It’s nothing you can really anticipate until you take the walls down, and once they’re down, It’s a whole new thing.”
The open ceiling exposed two-foot concrete beams, which, while beautiful, created a bit of a cavernous effect in the space. The homeowners loved the look of the teak ceilings they’d seen in a hotel, and so the design team brought in teak boxes to recreate that look while also helping with sound baffling and disguising electrical and mechanical work. Each box is a different height and length, creating almost an inverted coffered effect,” says Falkenberg. “it creates a rhythm, there’s a bit of play to it.”
Exposed original brick lines the back wall of the kitchen, and the team was careful to protect it by hanging shelves and cabinetry from the ceiling, rather than directly onto the brickwork itself. Stainless steel counters in front of the wall also rise up into a low ledge, which levels out the uneven wall face and provides space for a toaster and planters for kitchen herbs.
In the main living space, the original fireplace was a typical drywall box, but the team at Falken Reynolds wanted the new iteration to feel almost as if it was a freestanding piece of furniture. Its asymmetrical design of black-flamed granite, cold-rolled steel and travertine became the inspiration for a re-envisioning of the entire suite. From the nearby home bar and media centre to the kitchen and home theatre, each installation in the space is made to feel like its own standalone unit.
The condo is quite long and deep, and because the main bedroom and bath is near the back, the team used frosted glass to separate it, allowing light to travel deep into the space. Meanwhile, in the guest bathroom, the small square footage made the extra-high ceiling feel a bit too vertical, so the team installed teak slats overhead to keep it open, but a little more contained. The result also makes the room feel as though it’s outdoors, with nothing but the sky above.
And, of course, with four dogs in the home, a dedicated dog shower was a must. The team claimed a corner of the laundry room for just such a task.
That kind of personalization is exactly what made this project such a thrill for Falkenberg and Reynolds. “The best part of this project was just how into the building the clients were,” says Falkenberg. “When we’re working in condos, people always have a life expectancy of their time in the condo, usually five or 10 years, so we’re always trying to design with a little bit of an eye to resale.”
But these clients, he says, were clear that this was their forever home. “So then It’s all about what they love. It’s a really fun way to work… you just do what your client gets excited about.”
Originally published February 2021.
Are you over 18 years of age?