OOPS. Your Flash player is missing or outdated.Click here to update your player so you can see this content.


Subscribe today
Going In House: Family function
Written by Mike Landry   
shaw8.jpg
Photography by May Truong

High ceilings, sun-filled rooms, and tropical colours make a former farmhouse home for a law couple and their four children

Select any image to see the slideshow

If Peter Straszynski and Anne Posno thought about everything they do in a day, it would be overwhelming. So they don’t. With full-time law practices and four children, the Toronto couple relies on an energetic lifestyle and a well-designed home to pull it off.

Tucked down an alley amid rows of brick homes near Ossington and Davenport, the recently restored century-old farmhouse faces south, unlike its east- and west-facing neighbours. But from the street, it’s the modern addition that greets you. Short on right angles, this feat of contemporary design is well-known in architectural circles. Divided into a triplex in the 1980s, Anne and Peter have turned the house into a delightfully quirky single-family labyrinth.

The presence of kids invigorates the home. It’s a playful environment accented by high ceilings and open concept rooms, angelic light from myriad windows, and country-quiet backyard surroundings. Able to juggle their kids and their careers with a “just do it” attitude, Anne and Peter are inspirations at their firms. “People come to us for advice about starting a family,” says Anne. “They look at us and say, ‘Well, if they can have four….’”

Neither Anne nor Peter professes to be stylish. Their home lacks the too-cute design elements that are the du jour of television interior design shows. Instead, they opt for minimalism and family-function. Tropically-painted walls were a must for Anne to keep energy high, while their one splurge is a simple white KnollStudio Saarinen dinner table that seats ten — the hub of family activity.

“You can’t take [style] too seriously. Even when you have something nice you can’t get too fussy. Kids are going to be kids. Things are going to break,” says Peter as baby Elliot toddles about the kitchen playing with his BlackBerry.

Simultaneously a quaint cottage, a modern architectural achievement, and as lively as the electric orange paint inside — the house, like the family, balances intensity with warmth. “This house really permits us to do what we do. Having this as the centre and hub of our life makes it all possible.”    

The Lowdown:

Names: Anne Posno and Peter Straszynski
Firms: Lenczner Slaght Royce Smith Griffin LLP (Anne), Torkin Manes Cohen Arbus LLP (Peter)
Areas of Practice: Litigation (Anne), Labour & Employment (Peter)
Years of Call: 1993 (both)
Location: Toronto’s west end
Building Profile: Five-bedroom, 4,500 sq. ft. farmhouse (circa 1880) with a modern addition designed by Oleson Worland Architects

Comments (0)add
Write comment

busy




Digg!Del.icio.us!Facebook!StumbleUpon!
 
< Prev

| advertisement |
 
www.fmc-law.com/Careers

Connect with us

Facebook
Find us on Facebook

Twitter
Follow us on Twitter

eBrief
Sign up for our email newsletter

Search


Latest comments

The long arm of the U.S. Border Patrol
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/flash/cityroom/Ca...
The $6,000 legal brain gain
Thanks for the mention Todd.
New OBA president set to lead by example
Lee is a quiet but strong and focussed leader. I'm look...
Short Cellar: The paradise of Gin and Tonic
Agreed. The one gin I always have on hand is Hendrick's...
Short Cellar: The paradise of Gin and Tonic
I've become a huge fan of Hendricks gin, which seems to...
Short Cellar: The paradise of Gin and Tonic
How can you have an article about gin and not speak of ...
The Crime Traveller: Israel
Thanks Jerusalemite for being a sharp-eyed reader...you...
The Crime Traveller: Israel
The "gold-domed roof" that is atop the Western Wall is ...
The Crime Traveller: Israel
Thanks CT!
Court Reporter: Thursday, July 29
Especially since the article linked to correctly notes,...

RSS feed

Contact us        Privacy policy       Terms of use