Martin-Lancaster House

Prospect,
Nova Scotia

Completed
2010
Martin-Lancaster House
Location

Prospect,
Nova Scotia

Prospect, Nova Scotia
Completed
2010

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