
Project: Shoreline House / Location: Victoria, Canada / Designer: Splyce Design / Location: Vancouver, British Columbia (Canada) / Builder: Mdrn Built / Structural Engineer: Aspect Structural Engineers / Landscape: Andrew van Egmond / Photography: Ema Peter
The Shoreline House in Victoria, British Columbia, is a renovation and addition of a 1960s home. Perched at the end of a suburban street where single-family homes give way to rugged coastline, the property is defined by rocky outcrops, mature fir and oak trees and sweeping 180-degree views of the inlet.
The clients who purchased the home approached Vancouver-based Splyce Design with a vision for a new residence. Given the site’s immediate proximity to the ocean and its sensitive habitat, the studio proposed the option with the least ecological impact: retaining and renovating the existing structure, while adding a compact, single-story extension.
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Balancing contemporary design with environmental sensitivity was a main focus of the project. “Strict waterfront setbacks dictated an irregularly shaped building envelope for the addition, which houses the primary bedroom and ensuite,” says Splyce, a modern design studio specializing in projects ranging from new homes and renovations to custom furniture and landscapes. “Designed with a minimal footprint, the new volume lightly touches the terrain, with recessed concrete foundation walls to avoid over-excavation in the marine protected area. The structure appears to hover, with its roof soaring 13 feet above a cantilevered screen wall that extends to a dramatic point.”
Approach to the home is choreographed by a colonnade-lined staircase leading to the front door. The addition, clad in light-stained cedar, contrasts with the shed-roof forms of the original house, where dark finishes echo the granite shoreline. Throughout, the design explores the meeting points of old and new, wild and cultivated, interior and exterior.
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In the landscape, patios and pathways integrate seamlessly with native vegetation and topography. Expansive windows—some with concealed frames to dissolve the boundary between inside and out, others precisely placed to frame specific vistas—capture shifting light and ocean reflections.
“Shoreline House stands as a testament to Splyce Design’s ability to create contemporary architecture that is rooted in place, attuned to environmental context, and enriched by the dialogue between landscape and building,” the firm says.



