Architecture worth slowing down for
The buildings, interiors, and public spaces that quietly shape how a neighbourhood feels to live in. Covered with genuine curiosity, not from the outside looking in.
The Courtyard Renaissance: How Forgotten Spaces Are Becoming Neighbourhood Hearts
Across Canadian cities, narrow gaps between old industrial buildings are being reclaimed not as parking or utilities, but as the kind of breathing room that makes a block feel like a community.
Copper Lane Lofts
A 1940s cold-storage facility that spent two years being argued over and three months being beautifully transformed.
The Founders Branch Library
The city's quietest architectural argument for what public space can be when designed for the people who actually use it.
The Laneway Garden
Nobody planned for this to become the most photographed spot in the neighbourhood. It just grew that way.
Heritage Row: What Makes These Houses Still Work
Victorian terraces designed before central heating, still preferred by families who could afford to live anywhere.
The Courtyard Renaissance
How the narrow gaps between old industrial buildings are becoming the breathing rooms that make blocks feel like communities.
The Collective: An Interior That Earns Its Warmth
The design decisions that make a community space feel like it belongs to the community rather than to a brief.