Berri House

Berri House
Montréal, Canada

A house located on a small Montreal plot integrate an interior courtyard to meet the clients’ hopes to find intimacy and natural light.


Montréal, Canada, 2021-03-16 –

The Maison Berri project is located near Jean-Talon market in Villeray, at the heart of the hustle and bustle of a sought-after neighbourhood of Montreal. The house that Sophie and Shawn had found, which was devoid of any architectural language after successive modifications, had to be completely redone to accommodate their family. The decision to demolish the existing home was a quick one due to the deteriorated state of the property as well as the sunken structure. Not to mention that the exceptionally small Montreal lot offered little to no space for a front- or backyard.

Tiny lively site

The challenge was to optimize the maximum capacity of the land to welcome a new contemporary building that would respectfully settle into its surroundings. The project also had to meet the clients’ hopes to find more intimacy within a dense neighbourhood and introduce the outdoor space within the heart of the home itself.

The project consists of a new 245 square meter (2640sq. ft.) building, with two above-ground levels as well as a mezzanine and a partially lived-in basement. In response to these challenges, two concepts were developed: a review of the ‘classic’ composition of the living spaces to situate them on the upper level, and the creation of an interior courtyard around which the house was designed.

Raising living areas

Moving the living room, kitchen and dining room upstairs offered, in part, more natural light to these living spaces all while offering some distance between the street level and the occupied rooms during daytime hours. This also allowed the integration of large windows without giving the impression of being exposed or imposing a life lived behind closed curtains. Inverting the typology to set the living spaces upstairs further reinforced the enjoyment of the mezzanine, with closer proximity with the rooftop terrace facilitating its use.

On the lane side, the L-shaped building aligns with the immediate neighboring buildings, ensuring the continuity of both the exterior spaces and the existing built profile. More precisely, the setbacks of the facades make it possible to minimize the presence of the volume on the landscape of the lane and to optimize the sunshine all around.

The property’s courtyard now runs from the inside of the building towards the alleyway (and vice versa). The inclusion of a porch, which doubles as a parking lot or covered terrace, ties the exterior to central access to the home. Partially covered by the upstairs kitchen, it also remains partially free and open, creating a skylight of sorts at the center of the home – a glazed connection from the upstairs level all the way through the ground floor.

Materiality and integration

The composition of the facades fully assumes a contemporary language, yet is reminiscent of the more traditional aspects of Montreal’s patrimonial architecture. The horizontal bands of stone that both break and unite the facade, the stone lintel above the windows, and the rows of vertical brick at the top all enrich the building’s composition. A monochrome application of lighter shades of beige and grey offers a softer touch.

Data sheet

Architect : Architecture Microclimat 

General contractor : Les espaces Per/So

Square footage: 2640 sq.ft.

Project end date: 2020

Photographer: James Brittain

Architecture Microclimat

Since 2013, Microclimat has been working in both residential and commercial sectors in Montreal as well as throughout the province of Quebec, and has taken a close interest in issues related to urban densification, built heritage and the right to the city.

Microclimat seeks to logically integrate a residential, commercial or public mandated project within its community. From micro to macro, the firm is interested in the ways in which we inhabit space through our use and within everyday life thereby creating a better understanding of the relationship between personal and shared spaces.

For more information


  1. www.microclimat.ca

Media contact

Source: V2 Newswire

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Facade detail - Photo credit: James Brittain

Facade detail
Photo credit:
James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Front facade - Photo credit: James Brittain

Front facade
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Front facade - Photo credit: James Brittain

Front facade
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Back facade - Photo credit: James Brittain

Back facade
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Back facade - Photo credit: James Brittain

Back facade
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Alley context - Photo credit: James Brittain

Alley context
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Covered terrace and central courtyard - Photo credit: James Brittain

Covered terrace and central courtyard
Photo credit:
James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Interior courtyard - Photo credit: James Brittain

Interior courtyard
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Kitchen - Photo credit: James Brittain

Kitchen
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Integrated furniture - Photo credit: James Brittain

Integrated furniture
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Kitchen - Photo credit: James Brittain

Kitchen
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Kitchen cabinet detail - Photo credit: James Brittain

Kitchen cabinet detail
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Orange accent - Photo credit: James Brittain

Orange accent
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Dining room - Photo credit: James Brittain

Dining room
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Living room - Photo credit: James Brittain

Living room
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Staircase - Photo credit: James Brittain

Staircase
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Staircase - Photo credit: James Brittain

Staircase
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Bathroom - Photo credit: James Brittain

Bathroom
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James Brittain

Press kit | 1633-05 - Press release | Berri House - Architecture Microclimat - Residential Architecture - Mudroom - Photo credit: James Brittain

Mudroom
Photo credit:
James Brittain

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