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Eight Terrific Ways to Use Slatted Wood at Home

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Breezy and visually stunning, slatted wood has become a mainstay of contemporary design. Below we review our favourite applications from the DL archives

Wooden slats can solve one of summer’s greatest puzzles: how to be in the sun as long as possible without getting sunburned or passing out. To that end, wood slats can filter out harsh light, provide privacy, and give the warmth and texture of wood we want – without crossing over into retro basement wood-panelling territory.

Not surprisingly, this has made them ubiquitous fixtures in backyards where they act as horizontal fences, trellises and pergolas. But they’ve been trickling indoors just as fast – whether as facades that create beautiful streaked light patterns indoors (see below) or as breezy stand-ins for cabinet doors and banisters.

Here’s a look at some of our favourite examples of the trend by Toronto creatives from the pages of Designlines. Click on the images to see more of each home.

charred wood slats placed high over the window - Patio Design Modern Home Toronto - Superkul

Superkül 

The charred wood slats placed high over the window in this Oakville home – nestled in a densely treed grove – allow fingers of light to travel into the galley-like living room without overheating the space. Outside, the slats connect with the facade’s solid wood cladding.

Outdoor Pagoda with Slatted Wood on the Patio of a Modern Home in Toronto - Dubbeldam Architecture + Design

Dubbeldam Architecture + Design

Architect Heather Dubbeldam dubbed this Annex home “Through House” because of the easy continuity between rooms. The outdoor pagoda, featuring slatted wood, appears to flow directly from the interior and shades the open-air dining area.

Sliding slatted oak doors in the kitchen conceal tableware and appliances.

Studio Junction

A window box above the sink floods this once cramped and dark kitchen with light. Whisper-fine Studio Junction millwork, for which the firm is renowned, shines in the cabinetry. Outfitted with sliding slatted oak wood doors, these cubbies conceal tableware and small appliances without adding extra weight to the otherwise tight space.

Slatted wood screen design - wood slat wall

Here, the firm once again illustrates the poetry of wood with a permeable slat wall that defines and shields the staircase. Vertical lines underscore the continuity between levels, encouraging upward mobility.

modern reno adding geometric volumes of the original house

OO Design Co.

“All the geometric plays are about the facts of this house,” designer Stanislav Jurkovic says. “How can I marry the rigour of new design elements with what’s already here?” For this reno, the answer was to play up the geometric volumes of the original house with modern strokes. Hence, the slatted wood blocking on the second floor: boxy, yes, but also porous and inviting.  

cedar deck with slatted screens enclosing the space

Anya Moryoussef and Gregory Beck Rubin

Tasked with replacing a tired addition with a functioning open-air living room, the architects crafted a stepped cedar deck with slatted wood screens enclosing the space. Now, light filters in through the spaces in the wood, while the outdoor zone is shielded from prying neighbour’s eyes.

slender metal screen

Guido Constantino

How do you make a staircase float? For architect Guido Constantino, the answer came in the form of slender metal slats that, depending on where you’re standing, either disappear into the home’s white palette or come to life when in use. Another take on the slatted theme that delivers surprise and intrigue through a unique material application.

Modern home reno by Architect Andrew Sun

Architect Andrew Sun built functionality into every part of the home. Shelves have embedded LEDs.

Atelier Sun

Atelier SUN’s latest project, a minimalist reno in East York, has a gentler nature. Seamless storage, a vanishing vestibule bench, a rear kitchen and a layout divided by slatted wood screens are secrets to discover. “We didn’t want the home to feel like a warehouse,” says principal designer Andrew Sun. “That’s why you see this layering, with the screens injected into the design.”

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Designed and built by its homeowner, the residence uses more than 30 slabs of Italian marble

Walk through the front door, and it’s the first thing you feel: thick slabs of Calacatta Vagli wrapping the kitchen walls and island; a block of travertine floating above a dark Pietra Grey hearth in the family room; and deep, aubergine-veined Calacatta Viola unfurling dramatically across the ensuite bathroom. Throughout this new build in Toronto’s Sherwood Park neighbourhood—appropriately dubbed Vaglihome—stone defines every moment.

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