This House Uses Its Ceiling Like a Tree

Arbour House is not organized by walls. It is organized by a wooden canopy.

Overlooking Cadboro Bay, the house could have depended only on its coastal view. But its strongest idea happens inside: a suspended wooden arbour, like an interior pergola, filters daylight, connects the rooms, and turns the ceiling into a small internal landscape.

Made of wooden slats and placed below operable skylights, this canopy breaks the light into shadows that move across the floor, walls, furniture, and living spaces throughout the day.

The house was designed for a retired couple who wanted a home for permanence: comfortable, accessible on one main level, and still generous enough to receive family and friends.

The sloping site allows the main life of the house to happen on the upper level, with the garage and guest suite tucked into the terrain. A concrete terrace, pool, courtyard, large glass openings, and views toward the bay create a sequence between interior, garden, water, and landscape.

But the real strength of Arbour House is not just the view.

It is the feeling of living beneath a built canopy — a wooden shade that filters light, lets air pass through, softens the boundary between inside and outside, and transforms daily life into a sequence of breeze, shadow, gathering, and view.

Credits:

Architect: Patkau Architects — John Patkau, Patricia Patkau, David Shone, principals; Luke Stern, Marc Holland, Michelle de Jong, Edward Kim, Michael Thorpe, Sebastian Elliot, Nicole Sylvia, project team
Size: 6,000 square feet
Completion Date: October 2023
Location: Victoria, BC
Awards: 2024 Residential Architect Design Awards
Photographs: James Dow, Patkau Architects, doublespace photography, Ben Fox

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