HomeHome RenovatingAdviceOmar Gandhi Architects suspends home over rocky shores

Omar Gandhi Architects suspends home over rocky shores

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Omar Gandhi Architects is no stranger to a craggy shoreline. The firm, based in Toronto, Halifax, and Berlin, is accustomed to Nova Scotia’s rocky terrain, building a viewing platform over the coastline in 2021 and the Rockbound residence in 2024. The East River Residence joins the list of rocky architecture. This time, the architects were faced with a site challenged by a valley nestled between two, steep stony embankments. In rocking with the conditions, the architects suspended the home over the uneven land.

omar gandhi architects in nova scotia
The home stretches across two rocky encampments (Felix Michaud)

The home, a residence for a couple relocating from Montreal, arrives delicately on the land. A series of slender steel beams support the structure, minimizing the intervention on the nature beneath it. Above the beams, a cedar base makes up the low-slung home as it stretches across the embankments, topped with a long, offset metal-clad gable.

home on steel beams
Slender steel beams lift the home above the craggy condition (Felix Michaud)

The roofline strategically scales the experience of the interior. Over the main living spaces, the roof is lowered to capture the southern light and create a greater feeling of intimacy. Over the yoga studio, however, the roof rises to capture expansive views of the ocean. Large openings throughout ensure light and the outdoors reach the inner trenches of the home, and sheltered terraces continue to bridge indoor and out.

home in nova scotia
An overhang helps create shaded areas along the facade (Felix Michaud)

wood stairs
The interior is clad in wood, tying the outdoors to the inside (Felix Michaud)

wood paneled wall and door
Fluted wood brings subtle texture to the interior (Felix Michaud)

The interior reflects the material palette of the residence’s surroundings. Soft, weathered gray, wood floors, and more cedar walls bring the tones of the rocks and sand inside. Coupled with minimal furnishings and decor, the materials and the exterior views suffuse the home. Like the textured rocks at its base, quiet texture, brought along by fluted wood and exposed wood grain, provides a calming balm to the interior.

sand and rock color palette
The interior color palette reflects the tones of the sand and rocks outside (Felix Michaud)

The core of the home rests with the kitchen and dining room, sandwiched between walls of extensive glazing. This core, like a glass bridge connecting the home to either end, reads as the most suspended from the ground—yet remains the most visually connected to it. Thin, minimal frames keep the view in focus. A row of windows inserted within the roof ridge provide even more light into the area.

glazing in home
The dining room and kitchen is lined with extensive glazing (Felix Michaud)

Cohesive materiality and consideration for the site render East River Residence congruous with the land. Its surprising suspension visually and structurally lightens its impact on Nova Scotia’s coast.


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