This Saanich home, designed by Daniel Evan White, is organized in steps on a forested slope, and several exterior decks continue the stepped progression providing an entertaining BBQ area; a pool with adjoining changing room and steam/shower; separate guest or caretaker quarters; as well as coastline decks that offer a variety of transitional daylight and shade opportunities to enjoy both White's remarkable creation and one of Victoria's finest coastlines.
White was never called a "Starchitect" because he designed homes rather than public buildings, but he was both prolific and masterful at what he did. As recognition of his work, the Museum of Vancouver even exhibited a retrospective of him in 2013.
Inspiration is said to have gone both ways between White and his mentor and colleague, Arthur Erickson. Erickson did get called a 'Starchitect'.
It's clear that both had been inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright's earlier work. This home, at 530 Salmon Rd., displays strong connections to nature throughout, with plenty of windows and natural material choices in addition to its strong, linear modernism.
An open air courtyard makes it hard to say whether the house lets nature in, or whether nature lets the house in.
Curved skylights look a little dated now, but in 1974, when the house was first conceived, they were a cutting-edge way to expand the view and let in more natural light.
The building of the home was finished in 1978.
More than 30 years later, the home has been recently restored and is up for sale, priced at $5,575,000 CAD.
Many of the interior surfaces are locally milled cedar.
A carefully designed system of programmable lighting continues the harmony at night.
Flooring is Australian brush boxwood.
Arched skylights are arranged as an interlocking series.
The Western facade, facing the Pacific coast, is fully glassed.
State of the art seismic engineering secures the structure to its foundation.
Windows and doors are of top-grade commercial quality, rather than residential.
Custom quarried Rajasthani slate floors are found both inside and out.
The counters are black honed granite, and the cabinetry panels are of resin-embedded reeds.
The entire structure encompasses 5500 square feet.