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6 Split-Level Homes With Plenty of Storeys

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With more light, more movement and a feeling of spaciousness, these homes will make you want a few more floors

Not all Toronto homes are long, narrow, one or two-storey affairs. Despite the abundance of Victorians, Edwardians and row houses fitting that familiar footprint, many more break with the city’s old norm. Amongst our favourites here at DL are the split-levels, homes that generate movement and flow with half steps and wide open sight lines, creating truly unique living spaces. Below, check out some standouts that we’ve covered in the past.

split level homes

Photo by Arash Moallemi.

One With Nature

How do you capture the feeling of cross-continental adventuring in a home? That was the question Great Lake Studio architects Rick Galezowski and Maggie Bennedsen asked themselves – and answered – in their Bellwoods-area home. Arranged around a 3-storey light well, each split level of the house is visible from the others and receives ample natural light. While the rooftop is deck is the envy all others in the city – Galezowski says it imparts a sense of “urban amnesia” – we’re truly smitten by the home office. Read about the home here.

split level homes

Photo by Doublespace Photography.

A Lot With a Little

To make a pair of small East End semis feel more spacious, COMN Architects connected six storeys with a floating staircase, then filled theirs with decor and furnishings informed by mid-century scale and restraint. The levels define uses in the home – the kitchen and living space pictured above being a case in point – and stave off any sense of claustrophobia that walls and partitions would impart. See the home here.

split level homes

Photo by Ben Rahn/A-Frame.

Walking on the Sun

Dubbed Kaleidoscope House, architect Paul Raff designed this split level home with sunlight in mind, using its multi-level layout to optimize natural light through strategically placed windows and mirrored balustrades. The result is a bright, airy space that balances light and shadow, creating a dynamic atmosphere throughout the home. See it here.

Photo by Doublespace Photography.

Move Along

Architect John Shnier, principal of Kohn Shnier, wants people to explore Wrap House; in fact, he makes a point of signalling that to guests with a semi-concealed front door. Once inside, they find themselves twisting and turning down a corridor, catching a glimpse of the kitchen, dining and living spaces as they proceed. Once there, more multi-level coyly hint at what they’ll find, beckoning them even further in. See it here.

split level homes

Split Level House by LGA Architecture. Photo by Arash Moallemi.

Suite Deal

Tucked behind a home in Harbord Village, this LGA-designed laneway suite makes room for five compact floors, proving – if it was ever truly in doubt – that they’re just as liveable as their larger counterparts. And with ample swathes of glass on its lot-facing side, each level sees plenty of natural light, too. See it here.

Spilt Level house by Architect Rudy Wallman. Photo by Naomi Finlay.

Squared Away

Architect Rudy Wallman’s home is impossible to miss. We mean that admiringly: inspired by Mies and designed and executed by Wallman, who specializes in glass-clad high-rises, its cubic exterior is clad top-to-bottom in glass. Inside, its airy split level arrangement fulfills the exterior’s promise of natural light while making the best of the home’s small footprint. See it here.

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This 130-year-old home near Kingston preserves the past while looking to the future

In the eastern Ontario towns of Napanee, Belleville and Kingston, a street of unassuming, softly aged red-brick homes is a familiar sight. While no less quietly beautiful, these heritage homes are a dime a dozen — and many are in dire need of an upgrade. For Napanee-based designer Shalagh Elliott, renovating these century-old properties is her main source of business.

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