Western Living Magazine
2026 Kitchen Design Tip #5: Make a Modern Kitchen Feel Original With Traditional Materials
2026 Kitchen Design Tip #4: Use Bulkheads to Cleverly Disguise Plumbing Systems
2026 Kitchen Design Tip #3: Embrace the U-Shaped Island for Entertaining
Recipe: Hopcott Farms Beef Short Ribs with Black Pepper and Sweet Soy (Sườn Bò Nướng)
Recipe: Gai Lan, Ginger and Anh and Chi’s Chilli Oil (Rau Xào Sả Ớt)
5 Scone and Biscuit Recipes to Try This Week
Tofino’s Floating Sauna Turned Me Into a Sauna Person
A Wellness Getaway in Squamish Valley: Off-Grid Yurts, Sauna Cycles and River Calm
Local Getaway Guide: A Peaceful Two-Day Itinerary for Harrison Hot Springs
Protected: Audi Elevates the Compact Luxury SUV
New and Noteworthy: 10 Fresh Home Design Finds for Winter 2026
The Best Home Accessories Our Editors Bought in 2025
Photos: The Western Living Design 25 Finalists Party
2025 Architects of the Year MA+HG On Their Favourite Things
Maker of the Year Winner Andrea Copp’s Local Favourites
See it yourself in person at the Vancouver Heritage House Tour June 5.
If you’ve ever driven by this Art Moderne marvel (which is part of this year’s Vancouver Heritage House Tour), it likely caught your attention. It’s not too often you see such a period-perfect example of late-1930s architecture here in Vancouver. While City Hall shares this home’s long horizontal lines and curving forms, not much else in the city does; after all, it was built during the Great Depression, when construction projects were few and far between, and those houses that did go up at that time tended to veer more towards modest, traditional stucco bungalows.So when architect Robert Lemon and his late partner, the celebrated interior designer Robert Ledingham, saw the home on the market in 1989, they fell in love immediately. “It’s so unusual architecturally,” says Lemon. “It’s not as flamboyant as Art Deco—it’s restrained, a pre-cursor to the Modernism movement.”MORE: See Lemon and Ledingham’s Dreamy Summer CottageLemon specializes in heritage home rehabilitation, so he and Ledingham were well-equipped to work giving the interior a complete restoration, bringing this piece of history back to its original glory. Inside, the original fireplace, light fixtures and hardware were retained, and the layout remained mostly as it was originally designed, with the living room on the second story and the kitchen and dining room on the ground floor.Almost as beautiful as the home itself is the garden surrounding it, done by noted landscape architect Bill Reed in 1990. “The landscape is as much a part of the house as the building itself,” Lemon notes. “People are instantly attracted to the hedges.” But other than a fresh paint-job, the exterior remains the same as looked in 1936… save one small change. “We did add a roof deck,” says Lemon, “but it’s invisible to the street.”
Stacey is a senior editor at Western Living magazine, as well as editor-in-chief of sister publication Vancouver magazine. She loves window shopping on the job: send your home accessories and furniture recommendations over to [email protected]
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