Canadian studio RSAAW has renovated a mid-century home in Vancouver to involve a double-top library, all-white interiors and a treehouse in the backyard.


The challenge, named Berkley House, is a two-storey home with a darkish facade surrounded by trees in North Vancouver.

RSAAW designed the project in Vancouver
The walls and ceilings have been painted shiny white

Community firm RSAAW remodeled the spouse and children home into a vivid and ethereal place by connecting its earlier divided two amounts and portray the gallery-like interior in white.

A slanted roof capabilities significant skylights that emphasise the central atrium place of the open-program ground flooring. Prior to the renovation, this amount was a mortgage loan helper suite.

Berkley House is in North Vancouver
The double-peak library by the stairs

“Family areas ended up considerably cloistered, with negligible natural gentle moving into vital regions,” claimed RSAAW.

Berkley House’s linked concentrations are anchored by a double-height library shaped by stacked bins of gentle wood. The wooden bookcase is created into the staircase linking the ranges jointly.

“The home’s feeling of area was even further augmented by vaulting ceilings during the primary flooring, ” continued the studio.

“Adding outsized glazing to permitted for views of the North Vancouver greenery in the backyard garden and further than, filling the property with light even on overcast times.”

RSAAW renovated the house's interior with a double height library
Massive skylights bring natural light-weight into the household

The reduce level’s circulation was also improved by turning a former mechanical space into a hallway with discreet storage, which contrasts with the open dwelling space together with it that is crammed with custom millwork and pops of color.

Previously inaccessible attic space has been transformed into a cosy children’s playroom, with a multicoloured carpet that is echoed in the strips of painted timber that mark the entrance to a treehouse outdoors.

RSAAW converted the property's attic into a cosy playroom
The children’s playroom was formerly an attic

Designed all around a Douglas fir tree, the understated treehouse blends with its surroundings, injecting a playfulness to the normally negligible dwelling.

RSAAW also replaced the home’s forced-air central heating method with power-successful underfloor heating and installed triple-glazed windows through the building.

A treehouse is built around a Douglas fir tree outside
Colourful slats feature in the treehouse

RSAAW is a Vancouver architecture organization started by Rafael Santa Ana.

Other new mid-century renovation projects include a modernised Melbourne condominium by architect Murray Baker and artist Esther Stewart and a holiday property on Fireplace Island in the Atlantic by American studio Andrew Franz Architect.

Images is by Ema Peter.