One of our earliest projects — a Yaletown loft where raw brick and blackened steel meet warm oak and soft Scandinavian modern, an industrial shell turned quietly refined.
Set in a converted warehouse in Vancouver's Yaletown, the apartment keeps the honesty of its bones — an exposed red-brick wall, steel-framed warehouse windows and structural columns wrapped in blackened metal. Against that industrial backdrop we layered warmth: pale oak flooring and full-height rift oak joinery that carries the kitchen and living spaces in one continuous material language.
The furniture leans mid-century and modern — a black Womb chair by the brick, a low grey sectional, Beetle and tulip dining pieces — grounding the loft in comfort without softening its edge. A sculptural steel column and mirrored partition anchor the plan, separating kitchen from living while keeping the openness that makes the space feel generous.
The kitchen is the heart: a warm oak island under a stainless hood, quartz counters, a matte-black tap and integrated wine storage. It's a home that balances the raw and the refined — proof, early on, of the studio's instinct for warm, liveable modernism.

