top of page

Elevated Magazines - Premium Lifestyle Content

From the superyachts making waves at Monaco to the estates redefining luxury living in Palm Beach, the automotive debuts turning heads in Geneva, and the artists commanding record prices at auction — Elevated Magazines captures the luxury lifestyle stories, brands, and cultural moments that have the world's most discerning audiences talking right now.

Mountain Retreat by OPAL Architecture in Quebec, Canada

  • May 15
  • 2 min read

The Mountain Retreat residence presented a unique architectural opportunity given the remote and private site, overlooking a serene lake and rugged hills beyond. The layout of the home in the landscape resulted from the intent to create a series of private family spaces each with a unique visual connection to the surrounding site, while providing privacy for those spaces from the site access and adjacent interior spaces.



To ensure privacy, the program elements are arranged in a pinwheel form, radiating from a central corridor, which also serves as the main entry of the house. The corridor is fully glazed to maximize views to the outdoors, providing fully climatized circulation between the smaller peaked wooden volumes, in which the family spaces are housed. The goal for the architectural form language was to create a series of well-proportioned gable volumes that allow the 3,800-square-foot building’s massing to break-down in terms of its scale and magnitude and integrate into the surrounding natural environment.



To help ensure that the home is energy-efficient, comfortable and healthy to occupy, the shell and mechanical systems were designed based on the Passive House principles. The building shell construction includes an airtight, highly insulated foundation, wall and roof assembly that successfully passed a blower-door-test. Ultra-high-performance windows and doors were specified and located where they collect maximum heat from the sun.



For the mechanical equipment, high-efficiency heating and cooling systems were installed, including a heat-recovery ventilation system that delivers a constant flow of fresh air while capturing 80 percent of the heat from the air it exhausts to the outdoors. Combined, this results in a building that uses approximately 20 percent of the energy consumed by a conventional code-compliant house, while providing a healthier, more comfortable living environment.



The core of the Mountain Retreat construction system is an innovative all-wood panel made from cross-laminated timber (CLT), which was manufactured in Quebec by Nordic Structures. CLT is an engineered wood product consisting of sawn planks bonded in alternating-direction layers to form structural panels that can be quickly assembled—in house-of-cards fashion—into a solid-wood building shell. The benefit of this construction system is that the wood panels are carbon storing, extremely durable, and also create a delightful interior environment through the exposed wood interior finish of the CLT.


OPAL design team

Matthew O’Malia, Principal Architect

Riley Pratt, Project Architect

Addison Godine, Project Manager

Jolie Lau, Designer

Shamika Khare, Designer

Michael Bailey, Project Architect


Project team

Architecture: OPAL Architecture

Interior Design: Lux decor (Designer Sun Ah Brock)

Contractor: Groupe Laverdure Construction, Inc.

Structural Engineer: Thornton Tomasetti


Photography

Corey Kaminski / MTL Interiors

Blue Valley South (Aerials)


Brands/Products

- Stûv, wood stoves

- CLT Panels from Nordic Structures


Perrelet Casino Royale
Northrop & Johnson Yachts for Charter
Nuvolari Lenard
bottom of page