Two white sheds in a landscaped backyard

Two Sheds

The need for a practical shed structure prompted two complementary sheds with a mediating space between—an informal courtyard—positioned firmly against a Vancouver laneway. The variations present a playful juxtaposition of formal stereotypes, pitting the ubiquitous West Coast ninety-degree tilt against the angularity of contemporary architectural form.

Location

Vancouver, Canada

Start Date

2007

Area

1,200 SF

Status

Completed

Type

Infill Structures

Team

Giaimo

Photography

Lori Kiessling

Architectural drawings of sheds

Process

Blurring the public and private realms, Two Sheds engages an urban laneway. With a flexible program, a growing neighbourhood, the project anticipates the future through architectural interventions. Re-imagining two ancillary buildings in east Vancouver, Two Sheds reconsiders formal conventions for the utilitarian building type. This distinction is complemented by a compositional and material selection that allows for future spatial and programmatic changes.

Black and white interior view of shed

The context for the project is an odd assortment of light industrial and residential lots. The dimensions of the site are 47 by 122 feet which is consistent with a lot module prominent throughout the eastern part of the city. It is bound along its length by a flophouse on one side, an ice making factory on the other, and is capped at its ends by a public street and a laneway.

Aerial view of neighbourhood

The main building on the site—an artist’s studio and home—is a discrete two-storey concrete block structure positioned adjacent to the public walk and blended in with the majority of low-rise industrial buildings lining the street

Wall with Northwest Coast art

Challenge

The owner required a shed structure, a no-nonsense raw space to be initially used for firewood and vehicular storage. These two storage programs could have been combined, but instead prompted two complementary sheds with a mediating space between (an informal courtyard), positioned firmly against the laneway. The sheds are unconventional in design but practical in material and assembly, drawing parallels to the character of the neighbourhood. Like the spaces, the assemblies and finishes are conditional, expecting subsequent alterations and modifications. The material palette consists of light wood framing and light gauge steel cladding on concrete footings.

Night view of corrugated white shed panel
Two corrugated white shed walls against a plywood gate

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