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A 400-year-old Nova Scotia fishing village serves as a design plan in a pandemic

Smith House, by Canadian architect Brian MacKay-Lyons, follows a historic pattern on a coast landed upon by French explorer Samuel de Champlain

3 min read
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Smith House, on the South Shore, includes three residential buildings that serve “to break the scale of the house down into sizes that would be more in scale with the old fishing village,” says architect Brian MacKay-Lyons.


It takes a village, built with thoughtful planning, to raise a community.

That’s what Canadian architect Brian MacKay-Lyons is nurturing at his farm community Shobac, in Upper Kingsburg, on the South Shore of Nova Scotia.

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Rust-tones inside complement the exterior’s Corten steel facade. Exposed steel beams highlight white ash panelling on the ceiling, and polished concrete floors.

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The granite wine cellar, in the main pavilion building, features one of Smith House’s massive live-edge tables.

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The rustic shed, one of three structures that cover 2,500 sq. ft. of living space at Smith House, has a wood-burning fireplace and loft sleeping area.

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The 16-foot fireplace features a five-ton, granite mantel stone that had to be lifted by crane from the quarry’s storage building.

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The 28-foot, inverted live-edge dining table was also designed by Smith House’s architect. Three tables in the house were made from the same tree from Austria.

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Architects say Smith House’s larger day, or main, pavilion emphasizes prospect while the night pavilion is more about designed for refuge.

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