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Uncover 10 of Toronto’s Best Kept Secret Backyard Patios

Best Toronto Patios

From petit getaways to a sky-high terrace with a 360-view, here are some of the city’s most design-savvy patio spaces you won’t see from the street

By Designlines

More than ever, at-home outdoor space is at a premium. And with warmer weather finally coming to Toronto – and stop us if we’re being dramatic – we’ll need a superlative patio if we’re to feel at our best. Below, we’ve rounded up some of our favourites, just case you feel the same way.

Best Toronto Patios

1. Multi-tonal Modern

Panels of white concrete and black Anthracite zinc create the bold backyard environment of this Tudor Revivalist house with an uber-modern backyard addition — home to the co-principals of blackLAB Architects. The stark lines of the zinc box are warmed by a sprawling wood platform and in-floor uplighting, while a substantial glass door from Tiltco floods the open-concept kitchen, dining and living area with natural light. Read about it here.

Best Toronto Patios

2. Concrete to Jungle

A patio landing acts as the transition point between this concrete cantilever home and its lush backyard. Board-formed concrete walls and flooring mimic wood planks, softening the movement from house to wild — the backyard transitions into a protected Don Valley ravine. Architect Angela Tsementzis also ensured the house’s second story performs double duty as an overhanging patio shelter, so a surprise rainstorm never ruins a dinner party. Read about it here.

Best Toronto Patios

3. Textured Terrace

Accompanying a 16th floor penthouse at King and Bathurst, the rooftop terrace of designer Tom Deacon spares nothing in the way of texture and view. Flagstone, river stone and concrete pavers connect with decking and a pergola, both in ipe, to create outdoor rooms. Pops of colour are weaved in with the patio’s garden planters and vibrant lounge-worthy ottomans. Read about it here.

4. Country Calm in the City

Skygarden House scores its name from the home’s top-floor patio off the master bedroom. The whimsical, secret-garden space is finished with ash decking and plants that pop from a recessed planter. Topped by a dreamy canopy from nearby trees, it boasts lots of privacy, but a cutout in the roof overhead lets in the sun (and the rain). With such innovative approaches to maximizing space, it’s not hard to see why the architect Heather Dubbeldam won an OAA Design Excellence award for the project in 2016. Read about it here.

5. All in the Angles

When architect Luc Bouliane was tasked with updating a century home in Leslieville, he merged his white-washed cedar-and-aluminum-clad addition to the outdoor area by using the same material for the asymmetrical back patio. Surrounded by warm cedar fencing, hits of plant life, and comfy furniture from Fresh and Hauser, it’s the perfect locale to ogle the edges of what Bouliane refers to as a “thing” – an angular nine-faced polyhedron that serves as an addition to the original brownstone. Read about it here.

dl-w16-thrush-10

6. Mixed Media

Toronto’s Thrush Holmes — a mixed media artist and master carpenter — took a tiered approach to the patio space of his High Park home. The result? A backyard with multiple zones and lines of sight that feels distinctly silo’d from the urban world surrounding it. An elevated deck bridges the solarium and backyard sauna – once a shed that Holmes converted himself. Stepping down onto the stone and gravel platforms, the cedar facades and mature greenery enforce the feeling of an inner-city retreat. Read about it here.

7. The Royal Treatment

With a massive backyard to work with, David Long from The Practice of Everyday Design decided to give the patio of this Parkdale Victorian the royal treatment. The aluminum-clad addition walks out onto an elevated platform accented by warm built-in lighting and leading to a cobblestone pathway. In keeping with the open-concept approach to the interior, indoor flows to out through accordion-like thresholds from Authentic Windows and Doors, the eye-catching piece de resistance that makes this pared down space particularly memorable. Read about it here.

8. Lookout to Walkout

Looking to maximize space in their Edwardian period home, architect Vanessa Fong and designer Ryan Taylor took an out-of-the-box approach to a bay window in the house’s main dining space. Modernizing the old vernacular form of the window with a floor-to-ceiling glass door, the design duo turned a lookout into a walkout. When open, it connects the dining room to a sprawling wood deck, turning the whole environment into an indoor-outdoor space. Read about it here.

9. Present Meets Past

To get an 1892 Victorian in the Annex up to speed, Williamson Williamson Inc. opted for an uber-modern backyard that would provide weather protection and privacy. With a lush tree cover already established, they opted for large walkthroughs on both the main and upper patios. The double (and triple!) glass doors and balcony juxtapose the house’s original brick, while roofs with built-in lighting ensure a warm, cozy kind of coverage. Read about it here.

Outdoor living room patio - Slatted wood

10. Throwing Shade

The downsizing-retirees had found exactly what they wanted in their new Bloor West bungalow – except a suitable connection to the outdoors. Seeking to rectify the issue, the couple brought in Anya Moryoussef and Gregory Beck Rubin, who were tasked with replacing the 1940s rear addition with a semi-private outdoor space that could bring light into the home and negotiate the half-metre step into the yard. They found their answer in a clever arrangement of slatted wood and sliding glass. Read about it here.


Categories: Spaces

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