Green reached marble before the foundation. This single fact reveals priorities that will shape this Ontario home that is designed Studio brocaWhere Italian heritage and contemporary design sensations change with thoughtful clarity. Once in the 1940s property possession, the new residence serves as a preamble for the French Chetu, which appears beyond the French Shato, yet its soul speaks surely to the tusks.
Samantha Broka says, “The first item selected for the green marble home is before we break the ground – and we did anything to do so.” The owners of the house continue to say, “Greens are not only our favorite colors, but they combine them with the beauty of Italian rural areas, rolling hills, and deep green ps.
The 3,500 square -foot residence represents a balance act between two design languages. The minimum architectural lines provide structure, while the decrease and arches form a counterpoint of tenderness. This stress appears throughout the space between linearity and liquidity, from spherical light fixtures to ladder pickets. Whatever emerges can be described as ‘warm low’ – a word broca uses to catch the essence of the house.
The palette is directly reminiscent of the trees of the Saru with deep greens from the Italian rural areas, and Terra is reminiscent of the rust tones of Cota. “We think the color palette reminds us of the Tuscan wine country and rolling hills, but the contemporary touch brings Tuscan palate into modern design,” the family says. “The overall feeling resembles and belongs to many regions, which we have been very lucky to enjoy and enrich the gray months of Canada with warmth and color. The wood -framed opening in the bedroom gives a sense of rows of trees in the Tuscan wine country.”
For more information about Studio Broka, see studiobrocca.com,
photography by Lauren Miller,