Skip to Main Content
Advertisement

Studio Junction Designs Architecture at Every Scale

Advertisement

The firm’s furniture brings the clean aesthetic of their residential projects into a broader array of homes

Not many folks can lay claim to a personal home with international design status, but then Christine Ho Ping Kong and Peter Tan are not your average couple. It’s Saturday morning at their Courtyard House, one of the most famous iterations of residential architecture Toronto has seen since the millennium. The Asian-inspired home and office reflects a calming Japanese influence, and is also the project that launched Studio Junction, the duo’s award-winning architecture firm. Now, in their studio, located in their ivy-covered abode, Ho Ping Kong’s and Tan’s original tables, credenzas and tea carts beam in muted white oak and rich walnut. More than 10 years after its exciting debut, Studio Junction has set its sights on a new pursuit: a furniture line.

“We’ve always been interested in blurring the line between what is furniture, what is built-in and what is really part of the home,” says Tan. The architect and his team also run Studio Junction’s woodworking shop, lending experts’ eyes to millwork-intensive projects like the famed Mjölk shop-house in the Junction and Soma Chocolatemaker’s Scandinavian-style shop on King West. Somewhere along the way, clients began requesting custom furniture. With the commissions, Studio Junction discovered an essential new thread.

Furniture by Studio Junction Designs Architecture

“For us, furniture is one of the more tactile outcomes of an architectural process. We don’t consider them separate,” says Tan. “Previously, you had a holistic vision for a house,” says Ho Ping Kong, “and it carried through to the furnishing, the light fixtures and the landscape.”

The same sensibilities that set them apart in the architecture world shine in the streamlined collection. The floating credenzas fade into the home and borrow the slatted reveals of the Courtyard House’s built-in shelving. Quarter-sawn white oak for the coffee table results in a gorgeously clean grain and subtle Scandinavian edge. The walnut credenza is the portrait of hybridity: a soapstone slab provides the function of a pouring station, and an interior lighting system glows behind translucent Japanese rice paper. “We ourselves have been trying to get this soft light into our living room,” says Tan, “and we thought, ‘why not incorporate it into the furniture?’”

The pieces bear the unmistakable tradition of solid wood joinery, tapered dowels and solid wood connections. It’s a mastery in the details that even the untrained eye will savour.

For more info please visit studiojunction.ca

Advertisement
Advertisement

The industrial designer and textile artist shares the inspirations that keep her loom whirring

In a seaside cottage in Shediac, New Brunswick, the soft hiss and swish of high-tide molds my mood like putty. Breathing in the deep calm—and the smell of last night’s seafood—my mind is miles away from my home in cosmopolitan Toronto. Here, craft feels as grounded as the clams they dig for each morning, and as I prepare for my call with textile artist Laura Carwardine, I can’t help but wonder *Carrie Bradshaw voice* what is the future of textile art in Toronto?

Advertisement

Newsletter

Your Weekly Dose of Modern Design

Sign up for the Designlines weekly newsletter to keep up with the latest design news, trends and inspiring projects from across Toronto. Join our community and never miss a beat!

Please fill out your email address.

The Magazine

Get the Latest Issue

From a sprawling family home in Oakville to a coastal-inspired retreat north of the city, we present spaces created by architects and interior designers that redefine the contemporary.

Designlines 2024 Issue