Gaboury Residence

Address:90 River Road
Original Use:

Dwelling

Constructed:1967
Architects:
Firms:

Photographs

More Information

Étienne Gaboury’s design for his own family home shows well his unique approach to a regionally minded idiom of modern design. Clad entirely in wood shakes, the home is conceived as an energetic, almost organic assembly of angled and projecting forms. Inside, the residence features spaces both large and intimate, with a fusion of wood, large areas of unembellished (sometimes curved) white plasterwork and decoratively conceived areas of brick, including an impressive hearth.

A graduate of the University of Manitoba and the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, Gaboury began his practice in 1961.

Design Characteristics

Windows:

The front of the house has seven areas of light, of varying unique shapes and sizes

Doors:

The main entryway is located at the front of the house, raised above grade
Entry has a single very wide door that has a protective overhang

Roof:

sloped

The house has a sloped roof with shallow to medium depth eave

Materials:

brick, plaster, wood, wood shake

The houses facade is entirely clad in wood shake

Height:

2 storeys

Size:

3,808 square feet (1,160.68 square metres)

Neighbourhood:

Pulberry

Garage:

Double attached

Frontage Direction:

South east

Sources

  • Canadian Architect 14 (March 1969): 35-8.

  • Hellner, Faye. Etienne Gaboury. Saint-Boniface, Manitoba: Editions du Ble, 2005.

  • Thompson, W.P. Architecture of Manitoba: an exhibit prepared by Professor William P. Thompson for the Manitoba Association of Architects and the Manitoba Centennial Corporation. Winnipeg: s.n., 1970.