Design lighting doesn’t often strike twice, but for Adam Jardine, a marketing exec at Loblaw, and his partner, Ryan Chang, a graphic designer–programmer, that’s exactly what they hoped would happen when they bought their fixer-upper. The Victorian semi in Toronto’s Leslieville neighborhood had great bones and the perfect location on a tree-lined avenue, but it hadn’t been touched since the 1960s and was split into two apartments. Luckily, Adam and Ryan knew just the guy for the gut job. “Joel Bray was one of the first people we met as a couple more than 13 years ago,” says Adam of the H&H alum. “We’ve followed Joel’s work over the years and have always admired how effortlessly he blends old and new, high and low, and modern and vintage.”
Shortly after sealing the real-estate deal, Adam and Ryan wasted no time in calling up their old friend. They had always loved the home that Joel shares with his partner, Andrew (featured in House & Home’s April 2018 issue). “Even though he brought it down to the studs and totally rebuilt, everything felt like it could be original; it had character and felt timeless,” says Adam. Over wine and renovation talk, Joel let it slip that he was starting his own firm. Adam and Ryan quickly raised their hands to be among the first Joel Bray Design clients.
“There were a lot of similarities between our respective places, as well as a few key elements that I used in my own home that the guys wanted to bring to their space,” says Joel, who spearheaded the year-long overhaul that saw two units merged into one three-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bath home with a third-storey addition at the back. The industrial sliding glass door leading to the backyard and the bold black kitchen with brass hardware are a few of the elements borrowed from Joel’s own home. “The truth is, I would never pitch something to a client that I wouldn’t want in my own home, or that I think would have a short design shelf life,” says Joel. Imitation really is the sincerest form of flattery.
Scroll down to see the dramatic before and after of this Victorian renovation!
Adam (left) and Ryan in the dining area of their Toronto home.
“Victorian houses weren’t built with coat closets, so adding a vestibule in the corner of the front room creates storage and defines the entry,” says Joel.
You’d hardly know the brick in the dining room wasn’t original. “It’s a brick veneer that’s installed like tile, then mortared and painted the same color as the walls,” says Joel.
Having a kitchen in the center of the house was a priority for Adam and Ryan.
Walnut shelves by local craftsman Brennan Finlay warm up the true-black cabinets. “Consider finishes that will stand the test of time, but that doesn’t mean playing it safe or making things overly traditional,” says Joel.
The black cabinets were inspired by Joel’s own kitchen.
An eight-foot-square sliding door — the largest stock size available without going custom — opens up the living room to the backyard.
Ochre accents offer a cheerful contrast in the grayscale guest bedroom. “I used the same drapery fabric in my first-ever published project in 2012 and Adam had the same drapery made after seeing it,” says Joel.
The vaulted 16-foot-high principal bedroom is one of the rooms Adam and Ryan love most.
Joel designed a nine-foot-tall wardrobe with vintage brass knobs and art lights.
The principal bathroom features a pair of handsome his-and-his vessel sinks.
This third-floor flex space has the feature Joel’s most jealous of: a large skylight.