Location: Morin-Heights, Quebec
Year: 2021
Area: 327 m2/ 3515 ft2
Lead Architect: Alain Carle
Project Manager: Isaniel Lรฉvesque
Photographer: Fรฉlix Michaud
Contractor: Dominic Toutant
Glulam Structure: Art Massif
Windows: Fabelta
Cabinet maker: Xavier Collection
Press Distribution: v2com
About Alain Carle
Alain Carle has worked in the architecture field in Montreal for twenty years. Based on a pedagogical approach, he developed as a teacher and researcher in the Masterโs program at the School of Architecture of the Universitรฉ de Montrรฉal, his achievements rely on a critical approach to representation in the design process.
Since 2000, the Alain Carle Architecte firm has conceived urban design and architectural projects on different scales for public and private bodies. Assisted by a stable team of creative and daring minds, with complementary competencies and experience, the Alain Carle Architecte team offers architectural services at the forefront of the industry, to a clientele that plays with audacity and creativity to offer innovative projects. On the strength of its growing reputation in Quebec, Alain Carle Architecte now practices internationally.
In a natural setting at the limits of constructability, Rolo offers a landscape approach to an architectural project. Located in the Laurentian region of Quebec, and situated on a steep slope, the property is characterized by large, rocky outcrops and offers clear views of the Laurentian horizon. Before the intervention, the owners had created a variety of scattered and fragmented amenity areas on site, linked together by winding hiking trails that skirt along the steep cliffs of the mountainous terrain. Due to the organic and temporary nature of these initial site uses, their specificity informed the beginning of the project.
The conceptual premises of the project were therefore anchored to these temporary occupancy structures that the owners had developed over the years. Along the contours of a rocky plateau they already occupied, the location of the residence was organized in a strategic manner in order to maintain some of their existing “lifestyle”. Rather than dominating its surroundings, or reconfiguring its site, the architecture was developed to observe the landscape and respect its original state prior to the intervention.
In order to maintain the topography of the plateau, the project spaces were divided into two volumes following axes that can be seen on the site. This fragmentation made it possible to divide the program into two volumes: one housing the daily functions, and the other the nightly functions. A glazed passageway and open terrace unite the two volumes, offering a breathtaking view of the horizon.
In its spatial conception, the project favors a vertical deployment as a layering of plans that follow the programmatic fragmentation.
With this strategy, the footprint of the project was restricted, and preserved the site’s natural drainage structure, which is almost unchanged today. Built using glue-laminated timber, the structure allows for high ceilings and develops โโinterior landscapesโโ whose proportions recall those of the surrounding trees. This becomes the recurring theme and allure of the stripped-down interior, leaving plenty of room for the surrounding landscape. The rhythm of the supporting columns opens towards the horizon in vertical bays and breaks up the exterior panorama into small “selected paintings”. The large roof overhangs the entire outer perimeter of the pavilions, repelling snow during winter and sun during summer.
The structural layout is simple and apparent; expressing lightness and an ephemeral quality of the intervention, in contrast with the more permanent aspect of the rocky hillside.
The verticality of the project is strategic โ offering a sensitive response for the desire to preserve a delicate appropriation between the site and its inhabitants. The project preserves a mountain peak landscape, in stark contrast to the plague of deforestation and destruction of natural systems, and the incessant sprawl of development in this area, on the outskirts of Montreal.