I N S I G H T T h e A r t o f L i v ing
T h e
A p p r e c i a t i o n
of
B e a u t y
There is beauty in the world, waiting for us to recognize it. It comes in nature; in the mastery of a complex musical score; and in art. It is also evident in human behaviour and endeavour. Beauty is a form of excellence, seen in the way a vision is conceived and executed. When you experience it, you are moved. You feel uplifted. Mizrahi Developments thinks about beauty and how it can impact people. We believe in the power of architecture to make people feel good. A room with curvilinear walls can be like an embrace. High ceilings create a sense of grandeur, a sense of occasion, providing a private stage for the narrative of your life. Detailed craftsmanship in paneled walls, entranceways, coffered ceilings and millwork reinforce the feeling of a private sanctuary, in which you are protected from the busy urban life outside the walls. At 128 Hazelton, the last of its kind in Toronto’s Yorkville neighbourhood, Mizrahi Developments brings old-world craftsmanship and an attention to detail to every aspect of this boutique midrise. 128 Hazelton Private Residences is a special collection of up to only 20 custom-designed residences, created in celebration of the meaning and importance of beauty in our daily lives.
We invite you to make an appointment to visit the Presentation Gallery at 126 Hazelton Avenue. Call for your private appointment at 416-927-0181 or register today at www.128Hazelton.ca.
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The Last of Its Kind in Toronto’s Yorkville Neighbourhood You can live in the heart of North America’s fourth largest city, right around the corner from worldrenowned Bloor Street shopping, and feel as though you’re part of a village community. Yorkville, a heritage neighbourhood of 19th century architecture, is at capacity for development. Which is why 128 Hazelton Private Residences is a rare real estate opportunity to live on the most valuable street in the area. With up to 20 custom-designed residences, the boutique building is inspired by a love of beauty.
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Telephone: 416-927-0181
Miele. For everything you really love. Precision for culinary perfection Trust your treasured family recipes to the revolutionary Miele Range Series – from delicate pastries and artisan breads to tender roasts and succulent poultry. miele.ca
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In Select Stores Across Canada and USA In Select Stores Across Canada and USA 1168 Caledonia Road Toronto North of Castlefield Avenue 1168 Caledonia Road Toronto North of Castlefield Avenue 416-532-2891 barrymorefurniture.com 416-532-2891 barrymorefurniture.com Handmade in Toronto Handmade in Toronto 有中文服务 有中文服务 Insight -Sotheby's International Realty -OCT2016 v5.indd 1
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T H E A RT O F L I V I N G
WELCOME Living a luxurious life isn’t about having the most expensive things
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hen we embarked on the journey of creating INSIGHT: The Art of Living, we wanted to connect our clients and readers to unique perspectives, extraordinary experiences and thought-provoking ideas that would inspire lives lived more deeply, richly and imaginatively. Every issue of Sotheby’s International Realty Canada’s new magazine unlocks exclusive cultural, lifestyle and business intelligence from our global network of experts and connoisseurs, each shaping international tastes and local trends. From these luminaries of business, architecture, art, culture, gastronomy, travel and real estate, we reveal insightful gems with the intention of sparking your desire to seek out new and authentic experiences, follow your passions, and create living spaces and a lifestyle that inspires. In our inaugural issue, we invite you to embark on a journey to discover culinary hotspots right in the heart of our city, and meet Canadian innovators in fashion and design. You’ll get a glimpse into the privileged world of Sotheby’s auction house and behind the doors of our country’s architectural treasures. We’ll also introduce you to cultural and geographical terrains that span the world, from Arizona’s iconic Monument Valley to the exquisite landscape of Phuket, Thailand. At our core, we believe that modern luxury is being redefined by new-world sensibilities, with time, experience, beauty and curiosity as our new currency. We welcome your reflections on what constitutes a truly rich life, and any suggestions and thoughts that may have been evoked by this magazine. Make your life luxurious.
Brad J. Henderson President & CEO Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
Please connect with an email to insight@sothebysrealty.ca, or on Twitter @sothebysrltycan #artofliving
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F E AT U R E S 30 The Riedel Rank Dundee Corporation’s thought leadership series kicks off with Austrian businessman and 11th generation CEO, Maximilian Riedel
36 The Making of Michael Fassbender The German-born, Ireland-raised, London-living movie star on why he’ll never be content resting on his laurels
42 S eeing Double Dsquared2’s dynamic duo, Dean and Dan Caten, discuss their inseparability, channelling a funny spirit and venturing beyond the fashion world
58 S taying in the Game Unravelling Sotheby’s Auction House’s rise to the top, we discover what made them so successful and how they maintain that success 272 years on
76 Two of a Kind
12 the CITY EDIT 12 A genda This season, where to go and when for the best events and experiences in Vancouver
14 R aise the Bar Cocktail extraordinaire Colin MacDougall gives you the insider low-down on Vancouver’s most hedonistic haunts
16 At the Top of the Food Chain In an exclusive interview, we meet Ned Bell, the chef striving to make a difference through readily available sustainable seafood
22 D eep Roots We discover the history behind 98-year-old private residence Rosemary House and learn about the restoration plans in place to return it to all its glory
28 S tate of the Market Expert insight into Vancouver’s property market from Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
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Ontario natives George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg talk innovation, their partnership and how they became to be leading visionaries in the design world
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r e a l e s tat e 83 P roperty Listings Take a look inside the most extraordinary properties for sale across Canada
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lifestyle
THE ART OF LIVING
48 Trend Report We turn to the fashion front-runners for the must-have looks this fall
50 Eyes Front A showcase of talent from one of Canada’s most renowned photographers
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64 Q uest for the West Rowena Marella-Daw and her ‘pardner’ set off on the ultimate road trip in search of cowboy country
In s i g h t
68 Packing a Punch We discover the swankiest hotels and hideaways on Thailand’s biggest and busiest island, Phuket
74 K itchen Couture Recreate Michelin moments with a fully kittedout kitchen
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Two of a Kind George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg (p.76), © Nick Garcia, Blindlight Studio, 4747 Southwest 75th Avenue, Miami, FL, 33155, nickgarciaphotography.com
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CELEBRATE THE JOURNEY
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C ONT RIBU T O RS
Graeme Green Graeme Green is a journalist, travel writer and photographer for international publications, including The Sunday Times, The Guardian, National Geographic, Adventure Cyclist, and more. He’s also online editor for Wanderlust. He’s travelled to more than 70 countries, from Argentina to Zambia. On page 68 Graeme takes us on his exotic adventure around Thailand’s biggest and busiest island, Phuket.
R o w e n a M a r e l l a - Daw Writing about travel has been Rowena Marella-Daw’s passion for the past 15 years. Based in the UK, Rowena pens for prestigious print and online publications globally, specialising in luxury travel and honeymoons, as well as lifestyle topics ranging from superyachts and spas, to English butlers and Michelin starred chefs. For INSIGHT magazine, on page 64, Rowena heads stateside in a ‘Quest for the West’.
Rya n A b b o t t Ryan Abbott is a writer who lives in East Vancouver with more than 10 years of experience, working in both the editorial and commercial industries, on campaigns. His interests include sustainable design, architecture, baseball and container gardening. Ryan tells us all about the wonders of Vancouver’s Rosemary House in this issue’s Property Showcase pages (p. 22).
J e n n y Pe te r s Jenny Peters has covered Hollywood as a freelance journalist, editor and party columnist since 1989; she is currently the female film reviewer for AARP. You can read her work in many domestic and international publications, websites and wire services, including Variety, New York Magazine, USA Today and many others. She is also a founding and voting member of the Broadcast Film Critics Association. Read Jenny’s interview with Michael Fassbender on page 36.
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AG ENDA
This season Vancouver’s cultural calendar is brimming with not-to-be-missed events. From movie madness, to worldclass photography and captivating productions, Tom Hagues scopes out the top five dates for your diary
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© Bryce Bladon
Main Street, Saratoga Springs, New York, 1931, photo by Walker Evans
MASTERS OF M OV I E S
walker on the wild side
29 September – 14 October
29 October – 22 January 2017
This year’s Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) marks the 35th anniversary of the event’s running. Last year, the film festival received more than 140,000 admissions, presented 370 films from 70 countries, and played host to countless international guests – this year is set to be just as big. The best way to get the most out of this fantastic festival is to buy one of the package tickets, which allows you to get as much from VIFF as possible with the promise of extra talks, special events and screenings. Alternatively, for year-round entertainment and inspiration, consider taking on a VIFF+ membership – although that’s for film fanatics of the highest order. viff.org
American photographer Walker Evans (19031975) is touted as being one of the most influential photographers of the 20th century. Walker Evans: Depth of Field is an enormous showcase of his work – the biggest that Canada has ever seen. The exhibition features 180 black and white and color prints from the 1920s through to the 1970s, and includes the iconic images he took in the American South during the Great Depression. The work is documentary in style and captures various periods in American history that people often know about, but haven’t experienced. His eye for capturing a moving or stirring image really comes through in this exhibition, and it’s clear why he’s seen as one of the most influential photographers of his time. vanartgallery.bc.ca
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Image courtesy of Vancouver Opera
Image courtesy of Vancouver Sun
Kirsten Wicklund, photo by Michael Slobodian
L I G H T- H E A R T E D O PE R A
FLARES AND LONG HAIR
O N T I P PY TOES
24 November - 11 December
13 October – 26 February 2017
5-7 November
To see in the festive season and start enjoying all that the holidays bring, why not head to Vancouver Opera’s performances of Engelbert Humperdinck’s Hansel & Gretel? The story is the same as the beloved fairy tale, where two children find themselves on a magical adventure and get lost in the forest. In order to avoid getting into trouble with the witch who tries to pursue them, the pair has to use wit and their finest tricks, all the while finding their way home and to safety. The music is thrilling, with magical puppetry and surprising moments along the way, and regular opera goers will love this fresh take on classical performances. Get lost in the forest with Hansel and Gretel, but beware of the witch. vancouveropera.ca
Transport yourself back in time at the Museum of Vancouver, with its exhibition simply titled Vancouver in the Seventies. It’s based on the book Vancouver in the Seventies: Photos from a Decade that Changed the City, which is being released this fall, and takes a close look at one of Vancouver’s most varied decades. For the city, the 1970s was a time of protest, political upheaval, economic prosperity, and cultural blossoming, and this has been captured and presented to modern-day audiences (many of whom most probably lived through the changes themselves). As an added bonus, there will be various activities taking place that will “bring Vancouverites together to reflect on the 1970s through the lenses of activism”. museumofvancouver.ca
Ballet BC is British Columbia’s leading ballet company and in November, its new season kicks off with a bang. Program 1 features the world premier of Cayetano Soto’s new work, as well as his established pieces Fugaz and Sortijas. Fugaz was originally created for Ballet Theatre Munich in 2007 and is partly inspired by the illness and death of his father. It plays out through six dancers and is a nod to the complexity of life that we all face. For Sortijas, Soto teamed up with Lhasa de Sela for the music and explores, rather captivatingly, the ties of relationships that bind us together. This program is a delicate, moving collection of work that will make audiences pause for thought. balletbc.com
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R A I S E TH E BAR
Interview Joann Khatib Words Colin MacDougall
Blue Water Cafe bar manager and mixology master, Colin MacDougall, reveals the ultimate places to mellow out and let your hair down in Vancouver
01 C inC in R istorante + Bar
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lue Water Cafe’s bar manager, Colin MacDougall, started his journey in Surfers Paradise, Australia, before moving to the colder climates of Vancouver. He worked his way up through a number of leading bars, developing a knack for making exceptional cocktails and becoming somewhat of a connoisseur in his own right. Not only does MacDougall now hold a Certified Specialist of Spirits accreditation, he also has WSET accreditations from the Society of Wine Educators and the Wine & Spirit Trust. He made his mark on the city while working at West Restaurant first and now with Blue Water Cafe, and has become renowned for his subtle craft of revamping cocktail classics into dangerously good, modernized apéritifs that you could easily drink all night long. MacDougall also holds a Geology and Mineral Exploration Technology degree, which may explain his drink of choice: “anything on the rocks.”
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This fine dining restaurant has an amazing ambience and is located above the bustling Robson Street shopping district; you feel like you leave the city and enter Italy as you walk up the winding stairway. The intimate bar features an impressive wine list and a depth of spirits – namely grappa and eau de vie – that are unsurpassed, and truly sets the stage when you enter; it is the place to be. However, if it’s full, it is well worth trying for a seat on the year-round terrace that overlooks the busy street below. I particularly love the signature cocktails created here, but my go-to is always a Manhattan and an Old Fashioned. OPEN daily 4:30pm-late; 1154 Robson St, Vancouver, BC V6E 1B2; cincin.net
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02 G otham S teakhouse Gotham Steakhouse is absolutely worthy of a mention for downtown drinks. It features one of the most extensive lists for wine, cocktails and spirits in the city. Live piano creates an atmosphere reminiscent of a modern Rat-Pack supper club. There are many great cocktails, but a Manhattan with a steak (in my opinion, a better match than a Cabernet Sauvignon) is what it’s all about here. The bar team is fun and energetic, and amplify what is already a great place to saddle up and enjoy a few drinks. OPEN Mon-Fri 11:30am-close, Sat, Sun & holidays 4:00pm-close; 615 Seymour St, Vancouver, BC V6B 3K; gothamsteakhouse.com
03 04 P rohibition
P ourhouse A cocktail locator list wouldn’t be respected these days without mentioning at least one Gastown location, so without adieu, I recommend the Pourhouse. The room itself is something to behold. All of the furniture, including the light fixtures, are early 1900s period pieces. The cocktail list and back bar evolve beautifully, offering unique ingredients and concoctions. If you’re into something different and like the earthy smoke that mescal offers, I recommend the Mescal Old Pal and the Oaxaca Old Fashioned. OPEN Sun-Thurs 5pm-midnight, Fri-Sat 5pm-1am; 162 Water St, Vancouver, BC V6B 1B2; pourhousevancouver.com
A new addition to downtown is Prohibition. The green light out front the modest street entrance indicates that cocktails are being served. Prohibition is a true lounge in every sense of the word. The dark room accented with green librarystyle lighting creates a cool, relaxed vibe that inspires and intrigues its guests. Don’t be deceived though – the room gets buzzing and draws a great crowd of cocktailers. The seating is very comfortable, but a spot at the bar is where you want to be. Among the many drinks they offer, the Inception Negroni is truly a unique and incredible creation worth trying. OPEN Tues-Thurs 6pm-1am, Fri 6pm-2am, Sat 7pm-2am; 801 W Georgia St, Vancouver, BC V6C 1P7; prohibitionrhg.com
05 K eefer B ar The Keefer Bar is located near Keefer and Main street in what is quickly becoming a cluster of passion-driven, city-leading restaurants and lounges. The cheeky prescription-style list features ‘remedies and cures’ which are all worth a try. My go-to-first is always the Rosemary Gimlet, which is a perfect marriage of citrus and savoury. The room here is fun and lively, and can hold larger groups of friends out for a cocktail crawl and couples alike. OPEN Sun-Thurs 5pm-1am, Fri-Sat 5pm-2am; 135 Keefer St, Vancouver, BC V6A 1X3; thekeeferbar.com
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Words Nick Savage Photograph courtesy of Vancouver Aquarium
AT TH E T O P OF TH E
FOO D C H A I N Ned Bell is one of Vancouver’s most admired chefs. Not only are his culinary skills unsurpassed, but his efforts to raise awareness for ocean-friendly seafood choices are tireless. In an exclusive interview with Nick Savage, Bell discusses his passion and ambition for a future of sustainable seafood >
LEFT Ned Bell, image courtesy of Vancouver Aquarium RIGHT Ocean Wise Dungeness Crab Tacos, image courtesy of Vancouver Aquarium
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LEFT Prawn Yew Shingo Kido, image courtesy of The Ocean Wise Cookbook 2 BELOW Spot Prawn Cauliflower Yew, image courtesy of The Ocean Wise Cookbook 2
To garner attention for the movement, Bell wrapped his love of sport, travel and adventure into one and cycled across Canada
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he kitchen can be a microcosm for life, an arena where you chase perfection and search for meaning. Chefs that spend enough time in the kitchen will witness the world changing around them through their work. This is particularly true for those that cook seafood. In the documentary Jiro Dreams of Sushi, master itamae Jiro Ono is dismayed to see the size and quality of the fish depreciating rapidly due to massive demand and unscrupulous fishing practices. British Columbia-born Ned Bell cuts a similar figure. Through a career that has spanned an array of Canada’s best restaurants and a wealth of accolades, it became clear that if he wanted his children to have the same experience at the table that he did in his youth, he’d have to do something about it. In 2014, with the support of the Vancouver Aquarium’s Ocean Wise program, Bell founded Chefs for Oceans. It’s an initiative to raise awareness for ocean-friendly seafood choices with the ambitious goal of making sustainable seafood readily available to all Canadians within the next decade. To garner attention for the movement, Bell wrapped his love of sport, travel and adventure into one and cycled across Canada, drawing attention to one of the most pressing gastronomical issues of the day.
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Since then, Bell has gone from strength to strength and received an abundance of plaudits. In 2014, he received Canada’s Chef of the Year at Foodservice and Hospitality magazine’s 2014 Pinnacle Awards. Vancouver Magazine pinned the 2015 Green Award for Sustainability on him, and in the same year he was a finalist for the Global Seafood Champion Award for Advocacy at the 2015 Seaweb Seafood Summit in Malta. His career has seen him serve seven seasons on Food Network Canada’s Cook Like a Chef and take the reins as executive chef at the Four Seasons Hotel Vancouver and the lauded YEW seafood + bar. These days you can find him at the Vancouver Aquarium, where he’s recently taken the position of Ocean Wise executive chef. We caught up with him to see how everything was ‘panning out’: Where did you grow up and how has your upbringing inspired your cooking? I was born in the Okanagan, our wine country in British Columbia, then raised in Victoria on Vancouver Island and Vancouver. My cooking reflects this. It’s fresh, healthy, coastal Cascadian cuisine. How long have you been cooking professionally? I’d been working in kitchens for 24 years. Was there a watershed moment that led you into the profession? When I was 14, my first job was in a restaurant washing dishes, then working as a bus boy. Even from then, I was addicted to the experience of interacting with people, both my peers and the customers; I loved doing the job and the immediate praise or criticism you’d receive. Thus far, what is your most memorable moment as a chef ? There have been so many. I am one of the lucky ones: I love to cook, I love people. Being a chef is such a fantastic opportunity for me to engage, educate and create experiences. How would you describe your cooking style? My style is globally inspired but locally created.
ABOVE Ocean Wise Yew, image courtesy of The Ocean Wise Cookbook 2 RIGHT Chefs for Oceans event at the Aquarium, John Nightingale and son Max, image courtesy of Vancouver Aquarium
Do you have a favourite dish to cook? A signature? Well, my favourite dish changes all the time in accordance to the season, the region, or the culture that I’m currently immersed in. But, by far, my number one dish is the Dungeness crab tacos, which I serve with radishes and a miso maple vinaigrette. >
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Ins i ght
Sounds delicious! What do you think separates Vancouver from other cities in terms of its culinary offerings? With the lakes, oceans and rivers, the Fraser Valley, the Okanagan Valley and Vancouver Island, this is a special place and our ingredients are second to none. You’d be hard pressed to find fresher or tastier produce.
C hef ’ s S election AnnaLena – Spearheaded by Top Chef Canada contender Tony Robbins, who formerly rattled the pans at The Oakwood, AnnaLena serves contemporary Canadian cuisine par excellence. annalena.ca
You’ve recently taken up the post of Vancouver Aquarium’s Ocean Wise chef after a long and successful stint at YEW. What led you to make the move? I’ve been a part of the Ocean Wise program for the past 11 years, and now as the executive chef of the program, I can dive as deep as possible into advocacy and awareness for the health of our world’s five oceans, the species that live in them and the resources that feed nearly two billion people daily, not to mention sustaining the health of our ecosystem for future generations to come.
Savio Volpe – Playing to the time-honoured tradition of the neighbourhood Italian, Savio Volpe is an easy-on-the-eyes Mount Pleasant osteria that has been given a distinctive West Coast treatment. saviovolpe.com Via Tevere – Without a doubt the best spot in Vancouver to grab a Neapolitan-style pie. Reservations are strictly off-the-menu and it’s always buzzing. viateverepizzeria.com
Can you tell me about Ocean Wise and how it affects your work? Ocean Wise is a recommendation program. We used the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch Program, its marine biology and scientific research to ‘rate’ seafood, the gear, the species and the impact.
Zest – For sushi and sashimi, you’d be hard pressed to find anything better than what this Kitsilano bolthole offers. With a slick, sophisticated interior and perfectionist contemporary Japanese cuisine, it’s perfectly turned out for date night. zestjapanese.com
You’re a family man. Has that influenced the way you cook? For sure. My wife Kate and I have three sons. We want them to eat healthy food to benefit themselves and their community, to fuel their bodies and their minds. What would be the last dish you’d eat? Live British Columbia spot prawns caught on the Organic Ocean fishing vessel. I’d eat them raw, flavoured with nothing except seawater and the ocean air. They’re the best.
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Bella Gelateria – It’s all in the name with Bella Gelateria. Beautiful gelato crafted with care using the finest ingredients from local farmers. bellagelateria.com Purebread - Originally hailing from Whistler, Purebread has spread across BC. Tuck into CLOCKWISE STARTING FROM TOP RIGHT Image courtesy of Savio Volpe, Bella Gelateria, Via Tevere and AnnaLena
one of its freshly baked rolls or a sandwich and it’s plain to see why. purebread.ca
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Words Ryan Abbott Photography Sunny Jhooty
D eep roo t s A new owner is bringing Vancouver’s 98-year-old Rosemary House back to life in impressive style
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s you stroll around the historic Vancouver neighbourhood of Shaughnessy, the pervasive quiet and grand homes combine to create a feeling that you’ve gone back in time. One home in particular stands out for its historic character – a sprawling mansion with a half-timber exterior, prominent central gable and bay windows that peer out toward the hedge-lined street. It’s not hard to imagine horse-drawn carriages arriving at the front door, finely dressed passengers disembarking to attend an evening soirée. Standing in its presence, you get the sense that this home contains multitudes of history within its three-storey frame. Indeed, a hint of its heritage is offered by a single word set in cement above the red-brick columns that flank the driveway: “Rosemary”. Long before Vancouver was defined by gleaming glass towers, Rosemary was the grandest home in the city. It was named after Eleanor Rosemary Tulk, the only daughter of Albert Edward Tulk, born in 1913, the year construction on the house began. A.E. Tulk made a fortune in the liquor business and later became a successful lawyer. Tulk called on >
LEFT Refurbished Rosemary House; © Sunny Jhooty
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the most prominent local architects of the era – Samuel Maclure and Cecil Fox – to design a 16,000-square-foot estate like no other in the emerging neighbourhood of Shaughnessy Heights, Vancouver. Tulk died of tuberculosis in 1922, just a few years after Rosemary was completed. In the decades that followed, the home passed among several prominent owners before it was purchased in 1947 by the Sisters of the Cenacle. The nuns bunked mostly on the third floor and held services in the spacious ground-floor drawing room, until they sold the property in the mid-1990s. Over the last 20 years Rosemary was rented out to film crews, who used only a fraction of the grand interiors to serve as an anonymous, though authentic, setting for an earlier time. Just a few years ago the stately home was purchased by Mingfei Zhao, a Chinese businessman newly settled in Vancouver. Zhao has laid out his intentions to bring the home back to its former glory – and not just for show. His family is living in it already, even as he lovingly guides Rosemary through an extensive restoration to recapture the vision of its original owner and celebrated architects.
ABOVE AND BELOW Rosemary House; © Sunny Jhooty
Arc h ite ctu re of it s era Donald Luxton, a heritage consultant hired by the City of Vancouver to oversee the restoration, describes Rosemary’s architecture as a blend between English Manor and Arts and Crafts styles. As one of only a handful of Schedule A heritage homes in the city, Rosemary’s exterior is legally protected against “inappropriate alteration”. Inside, the restrictions are more lenient – the basement and third floor have been completely gutted in preparation for a redesign, while the first and second floors are being respectfully refreshed. Vancouver architect Ken Wong, who has been involved in the restoration, points to the repair of the sandstone arch above the porte-cochère, which bridges the main house with a 2,200sq ft carriage house, as an example of the challenges of the project. The original sandstone – believed to have been sourced from a quarry near Nanaimo, BC – must be carefully matched to remain faithful to the original design. “We basically have to restore exactly what was there, and repair it – even the colours,” Wong says, adding that a heritage preservation expert had to dig through several coats of paint to determine the original shade of the building. >
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Just a few years ago the stately home was purchased by Mingfei Zhao, a Chinese businessman newly settled in Vancouver. Zhao has laid out his intentions to bring the home back to its former glory
ABOVE AND BELOW The Society of Our Lady of the Cenacle; Š Vancouver Sun; Images courtesy of the Vancouver Public Library LEFT Rosemary House; Image courtesy of the Vancouver Public Library
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A n e y e fo r d e s i g n d e t a i l The original designers’ penchant for elegant artistry extends into Rosemary’s interior. “Maclure was an interesting character,” says Luda Artemieva, an interior designer working with Wong and the owner Zhao on the renovation. She says the home’s grandeur is amplified by the architect’s eye for subtle detailing. “You can see it in the fireplaces, for example, each one is different.” Most prominent among the home’s 12 fireplaces is one that greets visitors in the expansive two-storey entrance hall, which also features rich wood paneling and an impressive staircase that winds above the vestibule. A minstrel gallery landing provides space for a string quartet. To the left of the entrance is the drawing room, an expansive space with red fabric wall coverings, wood flooring with an elegantly detailed perimeter, several chandeliers and a broad arched window offering views to the back lawn. Rosemary has 16 bedrooms. Five of them, including the master, are located on the second floor of the main house. They are elegantly detailed spaces, Artemieva says, though they had tiny closets. When asked which room in the house stands out to her as the most memorable, Artemieva mentions a bedroom on the second floor, at the end of the wood-lined corridor. “The cozy room has delicate cornice moulding and a blue-tile-lined fireplace, overlooking the rose garden in the backyard, which has century-old roots. It is Rosemary’s bedroom,” Artemieva says. “You can really see that it was done for this girl, and that her father loved her a lot,” she muses. “After all, he named the house after her.”
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Most prominent among the home’s 12 fireplaces is one that greets visitors in the expansive twostorey entrance hall, which also features rich wood paneling and an impressive staircase that winds above the vestibule
ALL IMAGES © Sunny Jhooty
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STAT E OF THE MARKE T Soaring demand and heated bidding wars propelled the Vancouver real estate market to new heights in 2016. The benchmark price for residential real estate was up over 30 per cent year-over-year, and the benchmark price for a detached home on Vancouver’s west side now exceeds $3.5 million – up a staggering 190 per cent from a decade ago
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ith speculation that the introduction of a 15 per cent tax on foreign purchasers of residential real estate might cast a chill on the city’s housing market, we sat down with Polly Cordwell, managing broker of Sotheby’s International Realty Canada in Vancouver to discuss the state of the city’s toptier real estate market heading into fall 2016.
Even the most seasoned real estate market analysts have been astounded by Vancouver’s heated market in 2016. Headlines aside, what have been the stand-out trends in the city so far this year, particularly in the luxury segment, which reported unprecedented gains? It’s no secret that the market was firing on all cylinders this year, and that the single family home segment pulled ahead of all other housing types. What was a bit surprising was that the most significant percentage gains in sales volume was in the market for real estate over $4 million, which surged 100 per cent year-over-year in the first half of 2016. On the other hand, the industry was seeing healthy, but more modest gains in the sales of top-tier real estate under $4 million. For example, if you take a look at the sale of detached single family homes over $1 million in the first half of the year, sales were up nine per cent – a solid showing, but nowhere close to the 96 per cent gains in the sale of detached homes over $4 million. How has Vancouver’s luxury condo market performed? The market’s been very strong, and to put this into perspective you can compare Vancouver to Toronto. In the first half of the year, condo sales in the city of Vancouver alone were up 95 per cent year-over-year with over 600 units sold; in the entire Greater Toronto Area sales of condos over $1 million were up 36 per cent at around 380 units. What has been driving the real estate market? Has it really been a surge in foreign investment as many have speculated? Everyone has been looking for a simple explanation for the market, and an even simpler solution to
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The Vancouver market may experience short-term pangs, but we will see long-term gains Polly Cordwell, Managing Broker, Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
the rising costs of housing in Vancouver – but the reality is always more complicated. The fundamentals are that interest rates have been at historically low for years, and that our local economy has been healthy. Metro Vancouver is expected to see some of the strongest economic growth of Canada’s major cities in the next few years. The job market’s strong, unemployment is lower than in other parts of Canada and people are continuing to move here from other parts of the country, and from other parts of the world. Our low dollar has also helped. All of these factors have translated into a level of demand that has far surpassed the number of homes available. The question at the top of everyone’s mind is whether the introduction of the 15 per cent foreign buyers’ tax in Greater Vancouver will deflate demand and prices. What effect do you think this tax will have? The first thing to keep in mind is that this tax
was introduced when the market was already showing signs of moderation. What we’ve seen to date is typical of what happens when any sort of unexpected wrench is thrown into the market. There was an immediate effect on those sellers and buyers who were caught in the middle of real estate transactions affected by the August 2 deadline. What we expect to see in the coming months is an initial period of uncertainty, where buyers and sellers are not sure what might happen next, so the market falters. In the long run, we must remember that foreign interest has been just one of many factors influencing demand and prices. This is a city where the local culture of home ownership is very strong and where confidence in the real estate market runs deep – we just ranked third in the world for liveability by the Economist Intelligence Unit, above every other Canadian city. We are an international destination market. While the Vancouver market may experience short-term pangs, we will see long-term gains.
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Interview Josh Sims Photography courtesy of Riedel
THE RI E DE L RANK In an exclusive interview, 11th generation CEO Maximilian Riedel discusses the pressures of running a family affair, how at times he considered an alternative path, and his high hopes of some day handing the business over to one of his own
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aximilian Riedel does not underplay the pressure. “My father has often said that he is happy there’s someone around to pay his pension, meaning me,” he says. “But the fact is that nobody wants to be the last one holding the torch. Nobody wants to be the one who messes up a company that’s been around this long.” Riedel isn’t kidding. He is the 11th-generation head of the Austrian wine glass manufacturer of the same name, established 260 years ago this year - one which, after an idea introduced by his grandfather Claus and developed by his father Georg, has evolved into a specialist niche: whether one of the 60m entry-level glasses that Riedel makes each year, or the mouth-blown, €120-a-pop crystal ones, each employs a specific shape and thickness to maximise aroma and deliver liquid to the most active part of the palate. This glass is designed as a tool to ensure the ultimate drinking experience. It has made the company a global favourite of oenophiles and high-end restaurants alike. But, as Maximilian Riedel stresses, these are still tough times: fine glasses aren’t considered as desirable as they once were, and “fearless and very successful competition” is seeing the average price
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reduce significantly. Riedel may have only taken over from his father three years ago - he is now 38 - but he is acutely aware of the responsibility in handling the reins, and of one day passing them on, too. “Of course, I considered not joining the family business,” Riedel says - and he had the choice of two, his mother’s side running a sixth generation steelmakers. “My father was obsessed with Formula One, so I wanted to be a racing driver. But, critically, my parents had done a fantastic job of making the company interesting to me, giving me a sense that there was always pleasure in business, and especially in a business built around pleasure. Wherever we went my sister and I [she too is involved in the company] got a taste of the food and wine. Just a sip...” Call it indoctrination if you like. Riedel does. “Absolutely, that’s what it was,” he laughs. He spent summers working in the factory and the rest of the year in accountancy and business schools, before joining the company at the age of 22 - as managing director of its fledgling US operations. As it turns out, the posting was ideal. There, as one of the youngest members of the Young Presidents’ Organization, he got to talk family business shop >
Established in Bohemia in 1756, Riedel is one of the finest crystal glassware manufacturers in the world, with factories in Austria and Germany under its three main brands; Riedel, Spiegelau and Nachtmann.
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with other scions, and let off some steam. And, while the option to work in Asia may have proven tricky - “Asian culture just wasn’t accepting of a director so young then, even though growing up in a family business meant I was more in my 40s in terms of attitude,” Riedel explains - it put a welcome and necessary distance between him and his father. “Working with your father is a challenge - finding that balance between the personal relationship you have and respecting hierarchy - and, by going to California, putting 7000 miles between us was a good thing. There would have been conflict otherwise, much as there had been between him and my grandfather. And I have to say that I cried - tears of happiness - when I finally took over as managing director. I was just so excited to take over while still relatively young.” These thoughts are also shaping both Maximilian Reidel’s approach to business and his hopes for the family future of the company. While his father was, he says, a dedicated micro-manager, his more liberal, American experience sees Maximilian more of a delegator. “For me it’s about putting the right people in place, and, if they can’t
“The Riedel family has never stamped its name on a single bottle of wine. But over the past 50 years, the Austrian clan of master glassmakers has done more to enhance the oenophile’s pleasure than almost any winemaking dynasty.” – TIME MAGAZINE
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do the job, replacing them,” he says. “At a certain size, you just can’t micro-manage a company anymore. And, since you can’t clone yourself, the biggest problem in business now is finding the right people to do what you can’t.” Although as yet Reidel has only one child - a 15 month-old boy - he is hopeful that one day a son or daughter will take over. But he aims to instill an education - both informal and formal similar to the one he had in order to prepare the next generation. He is less than enamored with the current crop of early 20-somethings. “When I grew up the family wasn’t as wealthy as it is now,” he says. “In the 1970s the company almost went bankrupt. There were a lot of tough times and I suspect that younger generations don’t now grow up as I did, when independence was really encouraged, when there was little thought about the money. I look at the 22-yearolds I know - some in my extended family - and I think ‘no way could you run a company. You need a certain experience, character and luck to succeed in business as a young person, but the younger generations I see are spoiled.” So, while it may be many years before the
issue comes to the fore, Riedel is conscious of the need to prep his offspring. “Of course I want to do my best to bring them into the company and all that it entails, but then having a sound view of the responsibilities and wealth is as much about what they’re exposed to - their schools, friends and so on, the things that allow them to grow up as ‘normal’ as possible. By the same token I don’t want to close any opportunities to them that their position brings.” It is, in short, a balancing act. Not so whether they do, indeed, join the family firm. That will be as certain as Maximilian Riedel can make it. “We’re definitely staying a family business - it’s our name on the product, we’re independent from banks, we don’t share and can’t imagine taking on a partner. So I’d be heartbroken, devastated if no child of mine wanted to join the company,” he says. “It would feel like a failure on my part to persuade them of the attractions. I always joke that that’s why I need to have a very big family, to increase the odds that one of the children will one day head up Riedel. I’m not sure my wife is as convinced by that kind of business planning though.”
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Interview Josh Sims Photography by Ryan Emberley
KEEP IT IN THE FA MILY INSIGHT speaks to Dundee Corporation executive vice president Richard McIntyre about passing on wealth, the fine line between financially helping and hindering, and both the woes and wonders of family business
Richard McIntyre is executive vice president at Dundee Corporation. McIntyre is responsible for the operation, expansion and integration of Dundee Global’s distribution strategies.
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undee Corporation’s executive vice president, Richard McIntyre, heads up the wealth management business, while leading the organisation’s business strategies. He recently took time out of his busy schedule to answer a few questions for our inaugural Dundee Thought Leadership series. Here’s what McIntyre had to say about passing on wealth, succession planning in family business, and the Warren Buffett phenomenon.
Why should anyone who’s wealthy worry too much about how to pass that wealth on? Surely that can be easily addressed by a family when the right time comes? Well, the fact is that two-thirds of the wealthy don’t have any kind of wealth planning. In part that’s because business owners often don’t see themselves as particularly affluent - all their wealth is tied up in the business and often they end up selling it for much more than they >
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‘‘We want the best for our child and want to ensure they don’t have to struggle - but often the struggle is what makes us” Insight from Richard McIntyre expected and are then not sure how to manage it. Planning ahead is a big must. People assume bad things will never happen to them. But while it may be a hard conversation to have, it’s better to have it now rather than later. Our role is to be an independent third party adviser. You can offer another perspective, or reframe the issue for various family members to give them a fair representation of what’s happening. It’s hard to do that as a family member. On the other hand, sometimes in wealth management you have to be bold to get the best outcome.
and I’ve worked with family businesses where that has worked out well and with others in which it definitely hasn’t. Sometimes I’m asked to actively encourage a child towards a role in the family firm. I can’t do that, but I can try to understand what really drives the child and relay that back. Often the child - and we’re talking about young adults here, remember - just needs to go off and have other experiences. Often they then see the value in what their parents have created and want to get involved. What the child is dealing with is the stress of expectations. That has to be relieved.
Parents are often struggling with the middle line between helping their children by giving them money and possibly hindering them. What do you advise? Negotiating a line that reflects what a parent wants for a child is not an easy thing. We all come from different places and backgrounds. We want the best for our child and want to ensure they don’t have to struggle - but often the struggle is what makes us. Typically it’s essential that the children of the wealthy are clear on what their parents’ values are, that these are communicated, and that the child has experiences of its own outside of the family business.
We live in the age of the Warren Buffet phenomenon and his determination not to pass his immense wealth on to his children. Is this an important change? I think it is. Attitudes to passing on wealth are changing. And if as a rich person you’re more inclined to do something else with the money, this has to be communicated early and often, not sprung on your children when they’re 35. Certainly people are thinking more about what to do with their money - giving it to more needy causes, for example. Transitioning wealth to the next generation can be very rewarding - you’re creating a legacy. But increasingly people want that legacy to go further. They want to give back more widely, more ethically. Besides, passing on colossal wealth to your children can be extremely damaging and people know that. There are always many elements to passing money on well.
TH E FA M I LY FO RT U N E Demographically, the greatest transfer of wealth in history is underway. As an adult child of a successful business founder are you ready? Here are some questions you should ask and we will be providing more information in future issues: 1) It is a fact. At some point, the business founder will become seriously ill or die. Is there a written strategy to preserve the value of the business and family net worth? 2) In a multiple sibling family in which one of
Should a parent be insistent that their child follows them into the family business? It’s not a good idea. It’s commonplace that a parent does want their child to follow in their footsteps,
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more children are involved in the business and others have completely unrelated careers and interests, has a family counsel been created to equitably address issues related to all family members? 3) If the family business is sold, it is the after-tax proceeds that are important. Are tax minimization strategies in place? 4) After a dedicated life founding and operating a business, retirement is often a difficult proposition. As a child of a business owner what can I do to ensure retirement is a happy and enjoyable experience for my parents? 5) The business founder wants his adult children to join the business and carry on the legacy even though the siblings have entirely different career goals and aspirations. How should this situation be addressed?
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Words Jenny Peters Photography by Mike Windle/Getty Images
th e maki ng of
mic h ael fas s be nder Multiple award-winning actor Michael Fassbender reveals why he was frightened of his girlfriend when they first met, his plans to take the director’s seat and the reasons behind why he’s getting wrinkles >
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THIS PAGE Alicia Vikander and Michael Fassbender attend the premiere of The Light Between Oceans during the 73rd Venice Film Festival; Both photographs by Rosdiana Ciaravolo/Getty Images OPPOSITE PAGE Michael Fassbender and Tom Hooper during The 88th Oscars; Matt Petit/ŠA.M.P.A.S
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If Fassbender only travels the world to make three movies every year, he feels like he’s a bit of a slacker
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ctor Michael Fassbender is a citizen of the world. Sure, he’s a German-born, Ireland-raised, London-living movie star, but the reality is that he is always on the move. For Fassbender isn’t the kind of Daniel Day-Lewis sort of film star, someone who makes a single picture every couple of years. No, if Fassbender only travels the world to make three movies every year, he feels like he’s a bit of a slacker. “I don’t want to spend too much time thinking about things I’ve done, or linger in the past,” the actor told reporters at the Venice Film Festival in 2011, the year he broke onto Hollywood’s A list with five films. “I find that depressing. My main thing is, ‘What am I going to do next?’ Hopefully, I’ll do a good job on the next one.” The 39-year-old thespian’s first big break came with the World War II miniseries Band of Brothers back in 2001. Since then, he’s been one of the totally ripped Spartans in 300, the gaunt real-life Irish republican Bobby Sands on a Hunger strike in an Irish prison, an integral part of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds Nazi hunters, a Roman Centurion and an evil Civil War Rebel in Jonah Hex. And that was all before 2011, when those five breakout films – X-Men: First Class, A Dangerous Method, Jane Eyre, Haywire and Shame – catapulted him into a place where he could pick and choose his projects. Cut to 2016, and ten more movies later, Fassbender truly has roamed the globe, cementing his stardom in projects both near and far from home. He headed to Iceland, Jordan, Canada and Spain for Prometheus and to Louisiana for Twelve >
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"When I choose a film, the main things that I choose is the director and the script. I boil it down to those two simple things"
Years a Slave, for which he scored his first Oscar nomination, for Best Supporting Actor. Soon he was off to Northern California for Steve Jobs, the biography of the Apple founder that snagged him his second Academy Award nomination, this time for Best Actor. Trespass Against Us, the British crime drama that he shot in the U.K. along with Brendan Gleeson in 2014, brought Fassbender back to the Toronto International Film Festival in early September, to attend its world premiere. TIFF is a place that helped jumpstart the handsome actor’s career, beginning with the splash that Hunger made there in 2008. These days, the actor is so popular in Toronto that he was the famed festival’s guest of honor at the 2016 TIFF Soirée, which kicked off the 12-day, 41st annual festivities. Leading up to Toronto, Fassbender and his current girlfriend, the Oscar-winning 27-year-old Swedish actress Alicia Vikander (who actually first met on the dance floor at a TIFF party a few years before) spent much of their summer together, promoting the film they did together in remote locations in Australia and New Zealand in September 2014. That’s the place their romance really
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got hot, as they worked in chilly conditions on Derek Cianfrance’s The Light Between Oceans, a post-World War I drama that released in early September. “I said to Derek early on, ‘This girl frightens me,’” Fassbender recalled during a press conference for the film in New York City in June 2016. “She’s so fierce and brave as a performer. It kind of bowled me over. It was great and really made me feel like I had to come to work ready every morning. It was great, because we had a great chemistry from the beginning.” The hot couple is already trying to find another project to do together, as Vikander explained. “I loved working with Michael,” she said with a broad smile. “I would love to work with him again.” To that end, as well as to take the next step in his Hollywood career, Fassbender and a partner have launched Finn McCool Films, a Londonbased film production company, with the plan to develop projects. As Fassbender tells it, that company is part of the reason he moves between performing in small independent films like The Light Between Oceans and huge blockbusters
that pay him millions, including 2016’s X-Men: Apocalypse and the upcoming Assassin’s Creed (due to hit theaters in December 2017) and Ridley Scott’s Alien: Covenant. “By doing those big ones, it allows me to develop my own production company and get smaller films financed, so it gives me more leverage,” Fassbender said. “When I choose a film, the main things that I choose is the director and the script. I boil it down to those two simple things and it keeps things simple for me. And I like to go see something that’s more of a blockbuster, roller-coaster ride at times, and then something that’s maybe smaller and has a social commentary.” He also has plans to move into the director’s chair as he enters his forties. “I’d like to try directing at some point. We’ll see. With my production company, we’re always developing stuff. I just don’t know when, but there’s one that I’d perhaps like to direct, but I’d hate to talk about it now. Just wait until I do it, otherwise it will just be talking and not doing. Fingers crossed.” Until then, Fassbender will just keep roaming the earth, scooping up plum roles like that of playing Harry Hole, the much-loved Norwegian
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detective from the best-selling Jo Nesbo crime novels. He’s recently finished a stint in Norway, shooting The Snowman, the first of what is hoped to be a franchise series featuring that messed-up cop with a knack for solving big cases. And when asked about changing his personal life, settling down with Vikander in one place and perhaps starting a family, Fassbender is in no hurry to do that. As he once told InStyle Magazine Germany, “It is difficult for me to maintain a relationship. My job involves a certain amount of selfishness, I can choose when and where I shoot a movie, and sometimes it lasts until four o’clock in the morning. I run/live a large part of the relationship through the phone. This is not always fair for the other partner. I’ve been getting a few wrinkles from lovesickness. But I hope I’ll get married anyway and have children,” he said. That’s actually a good thing, considering that Alicia Vikander is about to set off across the world on a serious adventure of her own, taking over the Angelina Jolie role of Lara Croft in a new big-budget production of Tomb Raider. Seems. theirs is a match made in Hollywood heaven.
THIS PAGE FROM TOP Michael Fassbender attends a Macbeth special screening Q&A at Ham Yard Hotel in London; photo by Dave J Hogan/Getty Images OPPOSITE PAGE CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Twelve Years a Slave, © Fox Searchlight Pictures; Steve Jobs, © Universal Pictures; Trespass Against Us, © Lionsgate
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Interview Ellen Millard Image courtesy of Natali Arefieva
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Known for its outrageous catwalk shows, celebrity following and unique designs, Dsquared2 is changing the face of luxury fashion. In an exclusive interview with founders Dan and Dean Caten, the identical twin brothers behind the brand, we discuss their inseparability, venturing beyond the fashion world, and what the future holds for the dynamic duo >
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dentical twins Dan and Dean Caten have been inseparable since birth. Aside from a brief six month period when they were 16, the pair has spent the best part of their 50 years side by side; not only do they share a flat, but together they have redefined luxury style with their alternative fashion house, Dsquared2. They have frequently declared their sameness to be their strength, as they are completely in sync with one another when it comes to their creative vision for the brand. Born in Toronto in 1964 to an English mother and an Italian father, the Caten twins were the youngest of nine. Keen to break away from their suburban upbringing, they left for New York when they were 19, joining a fashion course at Parsons The New School for Design. This was, however, short-lived, and they returned home after just one semester. This did little to deter them though, and they were soon working as designers for big names such as Versace and Diesel, the latter of which funded the launch of Dsquared2 in 1995. Since then, the two have gone from strength to strength, honing their unique style and expanding their brand to create a niche fashion
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The Caten brothers were selected to design the Canadian Olympic Team Opening Ceremony outfits, which earned their countrymen a top spot on the best-dressed list house synonymous with alternative luxury. The twins have dressed the likes of Coco Rocha, Gwen Stefani and Victoria Beckham, and designed whole tour wardrobes for Madonna and Beyoncé. Never ones to shy away from a challenge, the unlikely sports fans have collaborated on a number of sporting events, creating a commemorative trainer for the Olympic Games in Athens, and designing an off-field uniform for the Juventus football club of Turin. This year, a highlight for the dynamic duo has no doubt been representing Canada at the 2016 Rio Olympics. The Caten brothers were selected to design the Canadian Olympic Team Opening Ceremony outfits, which earned their countrymen a top spot on the best-dressed list. An innovative mash-up of tailoring and sport, Dsquared2’s designs had head-turning results. Recalling the simplicity of Canada’s early Olympic uniforms, the twins incorporated graphic and heritage elements, including the country’s national emblem, the maple leaf. The standout piece was inarguably the sportif nylon-cotton men’s and women’s red jacket, which combined both elements of a windbreaker and a tailored blazer for a suped-up, sporty style that gave an entirely new meaning to the concept of athleisure. Famous for their elaborate and dramatic catwalk shows, the Caten brothers are full of >
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Dsquared2 F/W16 menswear catwalk show; Backstage at the F/W16 menswear catwalk show; Dsquared’s Team Canada Olympic Opening Ceremony outfit; Backstage at the F/W16 menswear catwalk show, all images courtesy of Dsquared2
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surprises – whether it’s celebrating the launch of their womenswear collection by lowering supermodels out of pink aeroplanes, paying homage to Glastonbury with 5-inch thick mud or asking Christina Aguilera to strip male models – the duo always has something up its sleeve, and you can be sure that the Dsquared2 show is one to which everyone looks forward to. “The making of a set is one of the most enjoyable moments of a creative process and we are totally involved in it,” the pair insists. “We always try to give our personal vision of fashion. For us, that means using bright colours, mixing patterns and reinterpreting everything with a funny spirit. Essentially, that’s how we are.” For the F/W16 collections, the brothers sought inspiration from further afield. Their wellreceived womenswear collection was inspired by the deel clothing of Mongolia, Tibetan national costumes, military officers’ uniforms, Edwardian
“We always try to give our personal vision of fashion. For us, that means using bright colours, mixing patterns and reinterpreting everything with a funny spirit. Essentially, that’s how we are”
ABOVE Ceresio 7 launch, image courtesy of Alex Olgiati, rockandrollei.isoverse.us LEFT Ceresio 7 bar area, image courtesy of Dsquared2
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ruffles and lace, camouflage, fringing and fur – quite the combination, but quite the collection. Their menswear offering rather drew inspiration from Japan, and featured kimono prints and embroidery at large. Not content with mastering the fashion world, in 2013 the brothers opened Ceresio 7, a restaurant in their second home, Milan. In an interview with Forbes last year, the pair hinted that this venture into the food industry wouldn’t be the last: “Milan was a sort of test to see how the restaurant would perform. So expanding is part of the plan. We opened the restaurant because we wanted to; it’s not our main moneymaker.” Regardless, it has been a huge success; the twins are undoubtedly ambitious and it’s clear that they’re not ready to throw in the towel just yet, but with a restaurant and a 21-year-old fashion business already under their belts, what will they do next? “We are unstoppable and unpredictable, so we cannot say,” they laugh. “We hope to continue working together in the future.” Coming from two brothers as close as these two, it’s hard to imagine their future any other way.
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TREND REPORT
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As we move into the season that’s all about keeping warm, embrace the trends that dominated the FW16 runways and get the looks to stay in style this fall
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01 J.Crew, jcrew.com 02 Valentino studembellished camel hair coat, $4,800, net-a-porter.com 03 Tudor Bal 100 Veau Velours Version Black 100mm heels, $1,495, christianlouboutin.com 04 Collar shirt in silver silk and polyester, $1,730, ysl.com 05 Hayden quilted celvet jacket, $458, brownsfashion.com 06 Mai Tai round-frame acetate and rose-gold tone sunglasses, $650, net-a-porter.com 07 Drapey culotte in wool flannel, $220, jcrew. com 08 Gold Michael Kors evening bag, POA, michaelkors.com 09 Nylon Webbed Belt, $68, michaelkors.com 10 Yokohama Shirt, $300, rag-bone.com 11 Cliff Tom Ford sunglasses, $451, mrporter.com 12 Ressence Titanium and Leather watch, $21,217, mrporter.com 13 Rider California 5 Gragments Zip Pouch, $476, ysl.com 14 Tomas Maier Cotton-Corduroy Trousers, $435, mrporter.com 15 Hackett London, mrporter.com 16 The Runwell Backpack, $1,303, shinola.com 17 Michael Kors black scarf, POA, michaelkors.com 18 Kenzo suede boot, POA, kenzo.com 19 INCOTEX wool yak-blend chunky knit sweater, $435, brownsfashion.com
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Words Tiffany Eastland Photography Douglas Kirkland
E Y E S F RO NT Douglas Kirkland reflects on the moment he met Marilyn Monroe, his dear friend Audrey Hepburn, and the legend and life of Coco Chanel. Izzy Gallery in Toronto shares a stunning showcase of highlights from his half a century career
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hen Canadian photographer Douglas Kirkland was 24 years old, he was hired as a staff photographer for Look magazine. A few years later, this opportunity put him on the path to becoming a multi award-winning celebrity photographer. In 1961, for Look’s 25th anniversary issue, Kirkland photographed Marilyn Monroe in the shoot that made him famous. In his career that spans more than 60 years, Kirkland has photographed everyone from Angelina Jolie, George Clooney and Elle Fanning, to Elizabeth Taylor, Brigitte Bardot and Audrey Hepburn. In fact, Hepburn was more of a dear friend than merely a stunning subject: “Audrey was a wonderful woman, and very sensitive. She had come through the war and became a star by accident. There was a gentleness about her – she cared about people. I met my wife Francoise when I was in Paris with Audrey,” Kirkland reminisces. The prominent photographer’s work is featured in permanent collections of museums and galleries around the world, including Izzy Gallery in Toronto, his Canadian representation. Over the past half a century, Kirkland has also worked as a special photographer in the motion picture industry, capturing more than 150 films, including: The Sound of Music, Out of Africa, Titanic and Moulin Rouge!. Izzy Gallery recently unlocked The Douglas Kirkland Archive, and invited INSIGHT into the photographer’s repository of Hollywood celebrity and popular culture. >
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ABOVE Douglas Kirkland behind the scenes; image courtesy of Izzy Gallery RIGHT How to Steal a Million advertising shoot, 1966; © Douglas Kirkland, image courtesy of Izzy Gallery, exclusive representation of Douglas Kirkland in Canada
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‘‘Chanel is here forever. She changed fashion, she changed culture, and she changed how people dress” – Douglas Kirkland
LEFT TO RIGHT Coco Chanel, Brigitte Bardot; © Douglas Kirkland, both images courtesy of Izzy Gallery, exclusive representation of Douglas Kirkland in Canada
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BOTH PAGES Marilyn Monroe shoot for Look magazine, 1961; © Douglas Kirkland, all images courtesy of Izzy Gallery, exclusive representation of Douglas Kirkland in Canada
‘‘Marilyn was supposed to arrive at 7pm. By 9:30, she still hadn’t shown up. When she finally came in through the back of the studio, she seemed to be moving in slow motion. There was a glow, like she was a heavenly figure. We put on a Frank Sinatra record, and she had the idea of wearing a white silk sheet and nothing more” – Douglas Kirkland 54
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LO LO N LO N D LO D O N O N D N D O N EW EW N EW YORK EW YO RK YO RK MI RK MI LAN LAN MI MI LAN LAN MUN MU N MU IMU ICH N IICH ICH MAN MAN MAN MAN CH CH EE CH ESTE CH STE EEESTE RRSTE RR G RG LASG RLASG G LASG LASG OW OW OW OW LO LO N LO N D LO D O N O N N D N D OO O NNN N EW EW NN N EW YORK E YO WYO YO RK YO RK MI RK MI LAN LAN MI MI LAN LAN MU MUMUN N MUN N ICH ICH CH N ICH CH MAN MAN MAN MAN CH CH CH E STE CH STE ESTE STE G RG RLASG LASG GG G LASG LASG OW OW OW OW
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Feature Elizabeth Finney Photography courtesy of Sotheby’s
S tay i ng i n t h e G am e How has a brand that was founded in 1744 remained relevant and renowned as a marketer of the world’s most valuable and prestigious pieces? Elizabeth Finney unravels the incredible 272 year rise of Sotheby’s Auction House
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hough the notion of collecting dates back many thousands of years, the 17th and 18th centuries saw a noticeable shift in the then very modern world of auctioneering. Many scholars became enchanted with the idea of a ‘cabinet of curiosities’, so would hunt down collectable oddities - a quest that would often lead them to auctions. Additionally, a boom in the circulation of fine artwork at the latter end of the 17th century gave the general public a taste for collecting, and so art auctions began popping up in London’s coffeehouses and taverns. With print media becoming more readily available, the production of auction catalogs steadily increased before the world’s first known auction house was founded in Stockholm in 1674. Sotheby’s was founded in London in 1744 by Samuel Baker, who auctioned off “several hundred scarce and valuable books in all branches of Polite Literature” from the library of the Rt Hon Sir John Stanley. London was, and still is, a hub of culture, knowledge and education. After the death of Baker in 1778, the company was split between his nephew, John Sotheby, and his partner at the time, George Leigh. The estate flourished, driven by the Sotheby family to expand into the art market, prints, medals and coins. People were keen to fill their homes with a huge variety of curiosities and at the time these often paid tribute to natural science – butterflies, stones, shells, bones and fossils were >
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LEFT Lot 19, Sold by the Palm Springs Art Museum to Benefit the George Montgomery Acquisition Fund, Nikolai Fechin, Nude, Estimate $810,750/1,135,050, Sold for $2,040,658; image courtesy of Sotheby’s Auction House ABOVE May 2016 Contemporary Evening Auction in New York; Image courtesy of Sotheby’s Auction House
Many scholars became enchanted with the idea of a ‘cabinet of curiosities’, so would hunt down collectable oddities – a quest that would often lead them to auctions 59
FEATURE
It wasn’t until the early 1900s that the turnover for art pieces and paintings began to outstrip that of books
LEFT Lot 2535, Magnificent Clocks from an Important Private Collection, Cartier ‘Flamingo and Lotus Automaton Clock’. A Superb And Very Rare Yellow Gold, Diamond, Yellow Diamond, Sapphire, Ruby, Emerald, Mother-Of-Pearl, Nephrite, Pink Hardstone, Lapis Lazuli, Onyx And Grey Hardstone Mantel Clock With Automaton Circa 1990 Mvt 81 Case Wk900014. Estimate $193,230/322,050 Sold for $1,241,825; image courtesy of Sotheby’s Auction House RIGHT Auctioneer Mr Peter Wilson, director of Sotheby’s, leads a popular art auction assisted by two porters. Wilson had influenced the established auction house’s interest in acquiring impressionist and modern art. Such auctions were sometimes held as special evening events. © Henry Grant Collection/Museum of London
all extremely sought after, as well as stamps, historical currency and weapons. As always, books and literary property were both favourable categories in the collecting world, and had been since as far back as the Ancient Egyptian times. It wasn’t until the early 1900s that the turnover for art pieces and paintings began to outstrip that of books. This coincided with the arrival of Peter Wilson at Sotheby’s, who ensured the company capitalized on the popularity of Impressionist and Modern works of art. The rest, as they say, is history. Fast-forward to 2016, and Sotheby’s is on the top table of auctioneering, with 90 locations and nine salerooms in 40 different countries. With more than 270 years in business and approximately 250 auctions held a year in more than 70 categories, Sotheby’s is a market leader, anticipating and keeping up with the trends at every fluctuation. In 2000, it successfully launched Sothebys.com and became the first international house to hold online auctions.
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Sotheby’s sold more than $90million of property online in the first six months of 2016 and 18 per cent of total lots sold globally by Sotheby’s were purchased online. Now, more than ever, we can see how the digital revolution has changed the game of auctions, and rather than resisting, Sotheby’s has embraced it. Improvements to Sotheby’s digital platforms has helped to drive a 29 per cent increase in website traffic, a 48 per cent increase in online registration, and a 39 per cent increase in online buyers. It has gone on to produce a catalogue app for iPads, beautifully covering all of its worldwide auctions, as well as making its more traditional saleroom auctions available to bidders via eBay’s Live Auction service. The Sotheby’s channel on eBay’s Collectibles & Art section allows for live-streaming real-time auctions, an innovation that opens up the once relatively exclusive world of high-end collecting to a wider audience. Additionally, last year Sotheby’s became the first major auction house
with an app on the new Apple TV, giving the masses five channels devoted to their huge range of offerings. Apple named it one of the ‘Best New Apps’ on the App Store within a day of launch and it remained there for more than five weeks, and it’s now available in 80 countries. But how exactly does this prestigious auction house stay on the pulse of an ever-changing 21st century audience, and what is it that people want? With Generation X flooding the auction room with a unique combination of knowledge that allows it to fathom both the benefits of modern internet and technology, while retaining a solid understanding of both classic and trending collecting, the pace has quickened and the prices have soared – the game has changed. A far cry from the candle auctions of the 18th century, the world of internet bidding is cold, somewhat unpredictable and oddly disconnected. Rather than staring your competitor down across the room, the allure of anonymity via internet bidding is intoxicating. Sotheby’s presented >
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LEFT Hispano J12 1933 coach Pourtout, Sotheby’s 1989; image courtesy of Sotheby’s Auction House BELOW A book sale in progress at Messrs Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge of Wellington Street, 1888; Illustration courtesy of Sotheby’s Auction House
a series of five online-only sales throughout July 2016, offering a range of property, from prints to books and contemporary art, and had encouraging results; nearly 1,000 clients registered to bid with an average sell through rate of 79 per cent, and 33 per cent of the buyers were new to Sotheby’s. As in the case of fashion or music trends, those chasing the most popular pieces have to be connected to this world on every platform – an illustrated brochure just doesn’t cut it anymore for today’s buyers. Impressions on Sotheby’s social media channels, for example, increased five-fold year-on-year, driven by a large increase in posting volume and audience growth, reaching a staggering 80 million impressions in 2015 alone. There are those who believe that the shift to online bidding poses a threat to the romance and personality of the auction rooms, but it can’t be denied that today’s audiences have never been bigger (the last five years has seen a huge increase in demand from the Middle East, the USA and from Asia), collections have never been more diverse and interest has never been more acute. In terms of what these audiences are after, it’s hard to pinpoint anything down to the month, let alone a year, such is the intense fluctuation of popularity these days. A few years ago people would have said that the designers of Brown furniture were classic and timeless. Now auction houses struggle to shift things that the baby boomer generation would have happily spent large sums on. Sales of Brown furniture as an example, will inevitably worsen over the upcoming decade, having an impact of the prices for classical objects collected. This is a world where the deeply historical pieces can fetch the same price as a modern, more recently created
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piece under the right name - Paul Evans, George Nakashima, Tommi Parzinger, Venini, and Andy Warhol have all been noted as ones to keep a lookout for this year. Additionally, more modern, natural pieces have been noted as up and coming, for example drift wood and marble pieces over more traditional pieces. The most notable recent surge in fashion has been that of rarity. Of course, this has always been a popular commodity, but experts in the field have pointed out a 21st century desire for connection, for the pieces they purchase to have contextual meaning. It’s not about buying for the name – with a flux of personal intelligence at the height of what is in vogue, so too does knowing the history, craftsman, uses and users of the piece. We’re hailing back to the ‘Cabinet of Curiosities’, but this time around we have a world of digital knowledge in our pockets. To say the least, it’s an extraordinarily exciting time for buyers, and many of them are on the hunt for record breakers. However, in a different part of the spectrum, it’s Sotheby’s partnerships with the likes of Artsy, eBay and Invaluable that have arguably been the most innovative. Using a comprehensive digital strategy, the company has set out to expand their clientele for more affordable pieces, making the auction house far more accessible, especially due to the increase in information for bidders available online. Once deemed to be a more circumscribed place of both business and pleasure, the combination of this 270-year-old institution with cuttingedge technology means we can safely say that Sotheby’s is a powerhouse of auctioneering, and continues to stand at the helm of the art, culture and collectibles world.
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Words Rowena Marella-Daw Photograph Josemaria Toscano
QUES T john st on c a n y on
m on um en t vall ey
la s v egas zion n at ion al park Los A ngeles
F OR THE WE ST Rowena Marella-Daw slips on the boots, dons the Stetson, saddles up with her ‘pardner’ and goes in search of iconic America >
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hat’ll be the day”, drawls John Wayne from our TV screen as my husband Terry and I watch the legendary John Ford 1956 Western The Searchers, filmed on location in America’s iconic Monument Valley. Aside from enjoying the film, we were getting suitably primed for our imminent journey to southern Utah, and fulfilling Terry’s lifelong Western-fanboy dream of riding across the Valley’s vast plains. I knew I might have be Tonto to his Lone Ranger for a few days, but a gal’s gotta do what a gal’s gotta do. Our road trip to Monument Valley began in Pasadena and took us on a lengthy drive along the Interstate 15 through backwater towns, Arizona’s desert landscapes and the surreal realm of Las Vegas. Beyond Beaver Dam, however, the terrain changed, exciting the senses with every twist and turn, punctuated by huge canyons, majestic bluffs and rock. Eight hours later, we found ourselves at the entrance of southern Utah’s great Zion National Park, where a chocolate-coloured road snaked round towering mesas, buttes, narrow slot canyons and arches spread across 229sq m. Every bend revealed another spellbinding view.
From high above the valley, we rattled along in our hire car down a seemingly endless dirt-track trail 66
Stopping to stretch our legs on prehistoric terrain, this experience felt almost unreal. But modern reality soon kicked in with a 1.1-mile drive through the Zion-Mount Carmel Highway, lit only by slithers of light squeezing through six narrow windows carved out of the rugged cliff walls. Even the hardiest trailblazers need to make camp and rustle up some grub, so hitching the wagon at a luxury cabin on Zion Mountain Ranch felt ideal. Set amid sprawling farmland in Mt. Carmel, this estate proudly hosts a herd of buffalo grazing on open prairie in close proximity to guest cabins. This herd of around 50 are protected, far luckier than the buffaloes that once roamed the Great Plains by the millions. Their numbers dwindled, no thanks to white hunters that slaughtered them almost to extinction not only for their hides, but to deprive the Indians of their sustenance, ultimately forcing them onto the reservations. Our quest for the West continued with a visit to Kanab city in Utah’s Kane County, where the deep valleys flanked by distinctive rocks and canyons have featured in numerous movies, including Mackenna’s Gold and The Outlaw Josey Wales, plus scores of TV Western series from the fifties and sixties. Classic shows such as Gunsmoke, Wagon Train, and the original Lone Ranger were filmed at the Kanab Movie Ranch (now the Best Friends Animal Society) and nearby Johnston Canyon. A mosey past antique and gift shops took us to Kanab’s Little Hollywood movie museum, which houses a replica Western town,
with authentic sets and a small main street that just begs for a ‘good-guy/bad-guy’ showdown. And just a few gallops away, the nostalgic Parry Lodge, a charming 1960s hotel, played host to the stars who filmed in the area. After bacon, beans ‘n’ coffee, it was time to holler wagons roll and forge yonder into the great Wild West. After crossing into Navajo territory, we checked in at the famous Goulding’s Lodge, which sits loftily against a sheer red rockface overlooking Monument Valley. My ‘pardner’ was quick to inform me that this place once served as the army headquarters of Captain Nathan Brittles, played by John Wayne in the 1946 film, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, along with another of his cavalry sagas, Fort Apache. Captain Brittles’ cabin from the film still stands behind the lodges, and the museum next door is crammed with memorabilia and images of the area’s film locations. With our prize destination in sight, we loaded the pack-mules and prepared to ride boldly, heading ‘that-a-way’ to the famed Monument Valley Tribal Park, the one distinct place that conjures up the definitive Western backdrop. From high above the valley we rattled along in our hire car down a seemingly endless dirttrack trail, gasping all the while taking in the magnificent natural monuments: West and East Mittens Butte, Merrick Butte, then slowly winding our way down past more mystical formations: Three Sisters, The Hub, Elephant Butte, Rain God Mesa and Totem Pole.
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W H E R E T O STAY Zion Mountain Ranch Our ‘little house on the prairie’, one of several dotted around, would have been considered a mansion in the days of Wyatt Earp. These western-style cabins are kitted out with 21st century mod-cons, but styled with a rustic ‘Old West’ feel. Our Zion Sauna Lodge, as the name suggests, features a sauna in the master bedroom, accessed through swinging saloon doors. Cowboys hankering for a quiet evening will find a barbecue pit and campfire area on the back porch overlooking the open range. And when the last cinders have faded, you just have to lie back and watch the heavenly constellations cramming the night sky. Horse riding tours: Several companies
zmr.com
offer a range of horse riding itineraries around the Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park, such as Roy Black’s guided trails (blacksmonumentvalleytours.com) and Sacred Monument Tours monumentvalley.net/horseback
Once at the valley floor, visitors have the choice to explore the Valley either in a safari-style vehicle or on a sturdy mount. Any self-respecting cowpoke will choose the latter, and on finding the designated corral of our tour company, we were introduced to our horses. We mounted (with help), adjusted our stirrups and set out from the aptlynamed ‘John Wayne Trail’, riding gently into the heart of the valley. The horses casually navigated a trail they knew like the back of their hooves – up and down steep ridges, through narrow gulches, past huge caves. For my trusty sidekick it was quite simply a cowboy dream fulfilled. This is Navajo Nation, where the rich culture of this sovereign Native American people pervade. We heard it in the language, saw it in the community’s strong sense of pride, respect for traditions and deep connection with these sacred grounds. The highlight of our cowboy experience was a visit to John Ford Point, an iconic rock precipice jutting high over the valley. The image of John Wayne looking out from here was immortalized by veteran director Ford, and this same location was used in the recent movie The Lone Ranger. Finally, as the music swelled and the end credits rolled, we dismounted reluctantly, stamped off the red dust from our boots and said goodbye to our guide and horses. At this point the wind was kicking up a mild sandstorm, but we didn’t care. This was a true bucket-list moment, and in our best cowboy drawl we declared: “That sure was one helluva ride!”
Amangiri Mid-way between Kanab and Monument Valley lies a very special place within the depths of Canyon Point. Pioneers in their own right, the owners of Amangiri decided this was the perfect location to build a five-star retreat. The Aman brand is known for its understated elegance, but why would any modern cowboy choose to spend the night here? For starters, it’s not often you get to swim in a pool that wraps around a canyon rock that’s millions of years old. The suite’s sprawling bed looks out onto the open desert valley. And when the clouds roll in, rain lashes and lightning illuminates the skies, the landscape looks even more dramatic. Any saddle-sore trailhand will find solace in the spa, and nourishment from the breakfast buffet. aman.com/resorts/amangiri
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Words Graeme Green Photograph courtesy of Keemala
packing a punch Phuket may be Thailand’s biggest and busiest island, but it’s also home to the country’s swankiest hotels and hideaways. Graeme Green uncovers three of the finest on this island, and perhaps any other >
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The island’s sweltering heat and abundance of beaches keep things decidedly laid-back. But this is also the biggest and busiest island in Thailand
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ou’re a fighter,” says kickboxing instructor Sompetch Jumpatong (or ‘Petch’), spurring me on. “Harder. Kick harder.” Down in the gym of the new Keemala resort, the two of us circle the room, Petch calling out moves: left punch, right punch, left knee, right knee, kick. Five final swinging kicks into Petch’s pads and my one-to-one session is done. I’m covered in sweat; training in Thailand’s national sport, Muay Thai kickboxing, is a tough workout. No one in their right mind would come to Phuket to pick a fight. Beyond the gym, the island’s sweltering heat and abundance of beaches keep things decidedly laid-back. But this is also the biggest and busiest island in Thailand; with so many people getting away from it all that it can seem difficult to actually get away from it all. Unless, of course, you know where to look… I’d come to stay at Keemala resort and spa, one of the most talked about new openings in Thailand. That’s largely due to the eye-catching design; with jungle walkways, safari-style tents and onionshaped treehouse towers, the inland resort, around ten minutes from Kamala beach, has a playful ‘enchanted forest’ feel. There’s nothing else like it on Phuket. I stay in a Bird’s Nest Villa, a vast, quiet space with a massive bed, huge bathroom with a goldcoloured mosaic floor, and it’s own private 10-metre long infinity pool overlooking Kamala Beach. Islamic morning prayers and birdsong from the surrounding forest create a gentle start to the day, which gets more energetic with my morning Muay
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Thai session. Not just a national sport, Muay Thai is a form of self-defence, learnt by young Thai boys and girls across the country, Petch tells me. “We learn Thai boxing to protect ourselves. I learned with my dad, to protect myself, because I’m small. But it’s also very good for your body, for fitness, for strength.” The rest of my stay couldn’t be less violent. I make good use of the Mala spa, with a Harmonizing Massage on the day after my flight – a full body treatment with ginger and lemongrass oil that’s so calming I almost fall asleep – followed by a firm, decidedly non-sleeping traditional Thai Massage the next day. Dinner’s served in the Su Tha restaurant, which plays relaxed pre-club bar-style music and has Thai classics on the menu, like Pad Thai, peanutty Massaman curry and fiery Tom Yam soup. In the morning, I head out with Tatchakarn Thanadechapasn (or Karn) from the hotel for a heritage walk of Old Phuket Town. “Phuket’s always been a big trading point, on the Spice Route and also for tin,” Karn tells me, as we drive into town. She’s also seen Phuket change over her lifetime, from the early days when backpackers started visiting this island paradise, through to the big resorts and five-star hotels: “When I was young, it was very green everywhere. You could count the number of cars on the island. Now, it’s so busy.” We stroll around the Old Town, exploring Buddhist and Taoist shrines where incense fills the air. On the edge of town, there’s a statue of a golden dragon. “This is Hai Leng Ong, king of the south
seas,” Karn tells me. “People from Phuket think the island itself is the dragon rising from the sea. If you look at a map, it can look like that.” We continue on to Wat Mongkol Nimit, the ‘Royal Temple’, next to Soi Rommanee, where Karn points to the street sign: “Rommanee means ‘pleasure’ or ‘happy ending’, so you can guess what happened here, right? It was the Red Light District during the tin-trading period, where merchants and traders would go to release their energy.” I move from Keemala to Paresa, a luxury hotel high up on the coastal cliffs along from Kamala beach. “This area’s known as ‘Millionaire’s Mile’,” operations manager Mirko Corbello tells me, as he shows me to my villa. “The price of property is outrageous.” The hotel makes the most of their sunsetfacing, west coast location, with every villa, pool, restaurant and spa looking out over the Andaman Sea. I spend the afternoon swimming in the sleek pool, even though my villa has it’s own private one (both looking out to sea). The rooms are minimalist, but spacious, with large ocean-view windows. In the evenings, after dark, I watch as the lights of fishing boats come on across the Andaman Sea. I head out early in the morning with the hotel’s Adventure Team guides Patrick and Alif, driving up to the northern tip of Phuket and into Phang Nga province to Khao Lampi-Hat Thai Mueang National Park, an area of greenery so quiet that dogs are sleeping in the road. We hike a circuit around Lampi waterfall, the park’s ranger Mi Aiganiyapon Chaanyannua leading us up into the >
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My Thai Nena and Richard Chaletzos, co-founders of innovative holiday search website, Luxtripper.co.uk, tell us how to avoid the tourist-traps and plan an authentic Thai adventure
Spa: Soneva Kiri Koh Kood is a tranquil spa paradise located on one of Thailand’s least populated island to the south-east of Bangkok. The spa promises to take guests on a sensory journey, with treatments including mud massages, Thai herbal baths, silk facials, warm oils of Ayurveda and a rich selection
Savour: Every visitor to Thailand must try Pad Thai, and
of wellness rituals.
even better than trying it, is learning how to cook it as most five-star hotels offer cookery courses. On the islands, another
Explore: Island hopping is a great option in Thailand. If
must is fresh seafood from the beach sellers, cooked on
you’re staying in Phuket, then Koh Raya Yai is just 45 minutes
charcoal in front of you and costing no more than $17 for a
by boat and has white beaches, crystal clear turquoise waters
whole lobster.
and great views back towards Phuket from Siam Beach. If you’re staying on Koh Samui, then try Koh Tao and if you’re
Sip: Not to be missed is the Woobar at the W Retreat, Koh THIS PAGE Bird’s Nest Pool Villas with ocean view bath; image courtesy of Keemala OPPOSITE PAGE Two bedroom ocean pool residence; image courtesy of Paresa Resort Phuket
staying in Krabi, then try Koh Lanta.
Samui. Not only does it have stunning views of the northern coast of the Gulf of Thailand, but every Thursday is Mo-hee-
The Hidden Gem: Koh Yao Yai is a lesser discovered
toe Madness with free-flowing mojitos, nibbles and cool,
paradise with the most beautiful beaches, snorkelling and
deep house sounds for 1,300 THB per person. For even more
impressive limestone rock formations. Reach the island by
creative cocktails, the Drink Gallery at The Library Hotel, Koh
boat from Phuket and remember to take cash with you as this
Samui is inventive mixology at its best.
total Thai escape doesn’t even have cash machines.
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w h e r e t o s tay Keemala: cottages, houses and villas start from 19,050THB to 25,500THB per night, including breakfast, but excluding taxes. One hour spa treatments start from $99. City tours and Muay Thai kickboxing sessions can also be arranged with the hotel. See keemala.com, or call + 66 (0) 76 358 777. Point Yamu by COMO: rooms, suites and villas cost from 9,000THB to 118,000THB per night, including breakfast, plus 18.7 per cent tax and service charge per suite per night. One hour spa treatments start from 4,125 THB. See comohotels. com/pointyamu or call +66 (0) 76 360 100. Paresa Resort: villas and suites cost from 16,500THB to 94,500THB per night. One hour spa treatments start from 2,200THB. Paresa’s Adventure Team can also arrange excursions, including the Jungle Trekking Expedition and Waterfall Picnic. See paresaresorts.com or call +66 (0)76 302 000. Etihad Airways (etihad.com, +1 8669481081) have return flights from Toronto Pearson International to Phuket, via Hong Kong, starting from $1,624. For more on Thailand, see tourismthailand.org
humid forest on leafy, moist pathways scattered with mushrooms, some of them “magic”. At Ton Prai Waterfall, a quick drive away, we take a cooling dip in a rock pool, before a banquet lunch set up under the shade of a wide Lukmai tree: shrimp, tuna, salmon, salads, cakes… Apart from a few locals and a colourful cockerel strutting across the lawn, it’s empty here. Of the many thousands of tourists on Phuket, it seems no one knows about this place. From Paresa, I travel across to the east side of the island, to Point Yamu by COMO design hotel, overlooking Phang Nga Bay. The hotel also has an impressive coastal location, with views out across the Andaman. The giant lobby is filled with colourful flowers, while suites are decorated in cooling white and blue. There’s also one of the coolest-looking swimming pools I’ve come across in Asia here, three sections totalling 100 metres, with cool blue-white tiles that match the sky, so it feels like you’re half-swimming, half-flying. After a day by and in the pool, a signature Shambhala oil and hot towel massage in the spa, and a blue crab and coconut curry in the Thai restaurant Nahmyaa, I head off the next morning from the pier at Yamu village on a
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wooden motorboat, sailing out across the ocean to COMO’s new, exclusive beach club. The strip of beach on Nakayai Island is decked out with sun-loungers, a bar and restaurant, cabanas, with kayaks and stand-up paddleboards to borrow. The small, uncrowded beach is far away, physically and mentally, from the crowds and busy bars of Phuket’s tourist epicentre Patong. “You know the James Bond movie, The Man With The Golden Gun?” one of the waiters asks me. “Over there,” he points to a cluster of limestone islands across the open ocean, “is where they filmed it. James Bond Island is just over there.” I borrow an SUP board and head out in their general direction, though they’re too far to try to reach. It feels good, though, to be standing upright on the Andaman ocean, the sun beating down, looking over towards the islands. The sea is calm and it’s easy to make progress, until overconfidence or the swell from a passing motorboat topples me from the board into the water. I get back on and paddle out further, but I’m shaky and tumble again. It doesn’t matter, though; not only is the water warm, but out here there’s no one around to see me fall.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP Treepod dining experience at Soneva Kiri Resort & Residences, photograph by Cat Vinton; Cocktails at the W Retreat Koh Samui, photograph by Max Pinitpong Photography; Cooking school at The Siam, image courtesy of The Siam
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Interview Tiffany Eastland Photography Courtesy of Yabu
TWO OF A K I ND Ontario natives George Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg were brought together more than three decades ago as students. In an exclusive interview, we hear how the pair’s innate creative abilities have led them to establish one of the most recognized design firms in the world
G
eorge Yabu and Glenn Pushelberg oversee one of the most recognized design firms in the world, so when you ask about their creative approach, you expect to be handed a pearl of wisdom, and that I was. “The type of project, context, location and client all inform the design direction, which in our minds always begins with a story or narrative,” Yabu explains. It therefore seems only fitting that I start with the story of Yabu Pushelberg – it’s a rather inspiring one, after all. In the year 1972, George Yabu, an inner-city kid and the son of two Japanese immigrants, met Glenn Pushelberg, who was escaping the small working class town he had grown up in, 65 miles outside of Toronto. The pair had both enrolled to study interior design at Toronto’s Ryerson University, and though they soon became friends, the true bond wouldn’t be formed until three years after they graduated. One day, rather by chance, Yabu and Pushelberg ran into each other on the street. Both were looking for a studio, and Yabu had seen a space that he couldn’t afford alone. Then and there they decided to share a studio. For years they assisted each other on their separate projects, until eventually, they decided >
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‘‘There’s a push and pull to the way we work, which suits us well – an unfettered challenging of opinions”
to officially combine forces marking the start of an abiding partnership in business, and in life. Now having worked together for more than three decades, Pushelberg says they’re able to easily reverse roles and take turns alternating from rational to more intuitive. Yabu says: “There’s a push and pull to the way we work, which suits us well – an unfettered challenging of opinions.” Yabu and Pushelberg’s ability to collaborate effectively is backed by a belief that anything is possible. And judging from the success of this dynamic duo, I’d say they have every reason to believe. In the early days, Yabu and Pushelberg had very few contacts, which meant working on absolutely any project that was thrown their way, but their days of designing dry cleaning depots are long gone. Today, Yabu Pushelberg’s dream team, who work from studios in New York and Toronto, and create interiors for residences, restaurants, retail spaces and major luxury hotel groups, including the Four Seasons in Toronto, the Park Hyatt in New York, the London Edition, and the newly opened Las Alcobas Napa Valley. Pushelberg is, however, quick to jump on my use of the term ‘luxury’: “The term ‘luxury’ is overused and has become almost irrelevant,
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CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT Private Residence Toronto; Bathroom in Private Residence Toronto; Park Hyatt New York
and overly segmented: affordable luxury, aspirational luxury, exclusive luxury.” The pair prefer the concept of making each experience special and unique. If you’re lucky enough to have stayed in any one of the hotels designed by Yabu Pushelberg, you’ll know that there’s no compromise on comfort or considered design. “The hotel should make you feel like you belong,” explains Yabu. Pushelberg adds: “Everything should work ergonomically and be comfortable, that is a given, beyond that, we look for a refined personality, a point of view.” I’m reminded, however, that it’s not just hotels. Pushelberg says: “We prefer to be designing a variety of things – this is part of what keeps all aspects of our work fresh and interesting. One creative outlet feeds another.” Yabu explains that their portfolio is very diverse, with gallery spaces, embassies and culturally relevant or special environments all falling within their remit. However, their favourite project to date is their own homes, as a collection: “In designing for ourselves, there are no rules or constraints; we have the opportunity to design for and consider only our own emotional responses and the results are therefore very personal.” >
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Having established a reputation on innovative design, I ask Yabu and Pushelberg whether it’s more important for architectural design to be ground-breaking or practical. Pushelberg says, above all else, it’s important that the design is appropriate: “When there is abundance, and economic prosperity, design takes on the former, and in a recession, the latter. Truly good design responds to both, and does not fall into being excessive for excess sake or overly pragmatic.” Evidently talented, I’m curious to hear what fuels their creativity: “For inspiration, any place that has depth of history and culture, from India to Japan to Brazil,” Pushelberg insists. When we spoke, Yabu and Pushelberg had just returned from Rio where they designed Canada’s Olympic House. And while they admit their favourite place to relax is their home in Amagansett, New York, the pair’s patriotism is undeniable. I ask Yabu and Pushelberg who they’d most love to design for, and interestingly, Pushelberg says: “We would love to redesign 24 Sussex. Not for the Prime Minister but for the country. As Officers of the Order of Canada, and Canada’s leading design firm working globally, we have a unique perspective and could offer a truly contemporary point of view.” If I were PM, I think I’d say hop to it, though I’d be reluctant to share with Canada. yabupushelberg.com
‘‘As Officers of the Order of Canada, and Canada’s leading design firm working globally, we have a unique perspective”
CLOCKWISE FROM LEFT Oceana Key Biscayne; Yabu Pushelberg’s Toronto Studio; Private Residence Toronto
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Floor Art “Great design will forever change your perspective...” – Michael Pourvakil
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r e a l e s tat e Take a look inside the most extraordinary properties for sale across Canada
SuMPtuouS Waterfront reSidence Ivry-sur-le-lac, Qc 230 ch. du coliBri | mls 26357047 $7,900,000 Stunning waterfront log home located on prestigious Lake Manitou. This magnificent property boasts 3+4 bedrooms, 6+1 bathrooms, gas and wood fireplaces, central air, a 10-car driveway, state-of-the-art audio and video system, intercom, and panoramic views. The utmost in luxury country living. Jill shpritser**, 1.514.691.0800 | Jshpritser@sothebysrealty.ca
Stunning Waterfront ProPerty EstErEl, Qc 5 PlacE d’anjou | mls 23024403 $4,500,000 Discover this magnificent and unique residence perched on 100,000+ sq. ft., featuring breathtaking views, all day sun, stone infinity pool, pond, dock, landing pad and 800+ ft. of waterfront. Combination of raised and flat land. Motor boat friendly. An easy one-hour drive from Montréal to country bliss. Karen Karpman*, 1.514.497.8218 | kkarpman@sothebysrealty.ca
World renoWned Vineyard sutton, Qc 2559a ch. scEnic | mls 16462476 $3,900,000 Chapelle Ste-Agnès, an estate with over 339-acres located on the slopes of Mount Sutton. Over 7,000 vines gracefully adorn the hillside amongst the 18 terraces creating an amphitheatre. A chapel, a grand ballroom, medieval style cellars, two lakes, houses and outbuildings complete this astounding property. marie-piers barsalou**, 1.450.577.0272 | mpbarsalou@sothebysrealty.ca Johanne meunier*, 1.514.926.5626 | Jmeunier@sothebysrealty.ca
Magnificent faMily HoMe hamPstEad, Qc 7 Baronscourt rd. | mls 16667331 $2,435,000 A stunning custom built, 3 level home. Magnificent staircase leads you to 4 large bedrooms and 3 ensuite bathrooms. Dream kitchen with 10 ft. cabinets. Immense inground pool and surround sound throughout the residence. Impeccably kept and maintained as turn-key as the come. Located on a private cul-de-sac and minutes from Hampstead Park. anne ben-ami (madar)*, 1.514.726.3037 | aben-ami@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
Centre of toronto’s food sCene ToronTo, on 314 PaLMersTon BLvd. | MLs C3524496
$6,250,000
Massive resort-like rooftop terrace comes alive with large parties. Open to the sky with outdoor cooking centre, fireplace, and large screen TV. Tribeca styled townhome. It will simply knock your socks off. 13 ft. ceilings on the ground floor. 2+ car private parking garage. Wow is an understatement. Christian Vermast†, 1.416.960.9995 | cvermast@sothebysrealty.ca Paul maranger‡, 1.416.960.9995 | Pmaranger@sothebysrealty.ca Fran bennett†, 1.416.960.9995 | Fbennett@sothebysrealty.ca trilogyagents.com
ClassiC GeorGian on Coveted street ToronTo, on 19 ChesTnuT Park rd. | MLs C3598238
$6,300,000
The address alone speaks volumes. In every major capital centre, walkability to the finest shops, cafes, and restaurants is paramount. Elegance abounds in this warmly regal family residence. Easy to manage gardens are ideal for the jet set. 6 + 1 bedrooms. Walk everywhere. Simply extraordinary. Christian Vermast†, 1.416.960.9995 | cvermast@sothebysrealty.ca Paul maranger‡, 1.416.960.9995 | Pmaranger@sothebysrealty.ca Fran bennett†, 1.416.960.9995 | Fbennett@sothebysrealty.ca trilogyagents.com
refined soutH rosedale ToronTo, on 44 daLe ave. | MLs C3602949
$4,195,000
Quality is everything. Incredible attention to detail in this sophisticated Rosedale residence. Renovated to the highest standards perfectly blending historical elements with refined elegant mod cons. Gorgeous open-concept layout. 4+1 bedrooms. Media room & 500 bottle wine cellar. Christian Vermast†, 1.416.960.9995 | cvermast@sothebysrealty.ca Paul maranger‡, 1.416.960.9995 | Pmaranger@sothebysrealty.ca Fran bennett†, 1.416.960.9995 | Fbennett@sothebysrealty.ca trilogyagents.com
informal eleGanCe abounds ToronTo, on 5 MiLdenhaLL rd. | MLs exCLusive
$3,450,000
English countryside inspired 5,000 sq.ft. residence in the heart of prestigious Lawrence Park. Pure enchantment. Cedar shake roof. Panelled main floor family room. Formal dining room for Christmas dinners. Second floor additional family room. A wonderful home to cherish for years. Christian Vermast†, 1.416.960.9995 | cvermast@sothebysrealty.ca Paul maranger‡, 1.416.960.9995 | Pmaranger@sothebysrealty.ca Fran bennett†, 1.416.960.9995 | Fbennett@sothebysrealty.ca trilogyagents.com
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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lavisH livinG oakviLLe, on 489 Lakeshore rd. e | MLs W3464183 $17,900,000 A magnificent estate located in one of Canada’s exclusive enclaves just 30 minutes from downtown Toronto. With over an acre of land you are steps to cafés, shops the finest restaurants and minutes to the yacht club. Custombuilt in 2010 by Ferris Rafauli, no detail is overlooked. This home offers a style of sophistication and timelessness. With intricate ceiling designs, millwork handcrafted on-site, exotic materials, the ultimate in technological features, an indoor pool, a theatre and wine cellar. An abundance of natural light floods the living room through a collection of triple glazed windows that provide exceptional sun filled views over the courtyards. A floor to ceiling cast limestone gas fireplace graces this traditionally elegant room. A haven of idyllic splendor, the palatial and very private outdoor grounds won the coveted Landscape Ontario award in 2015. Surrounded by a forest of mature conifers, meticulously manicured boxwood hedges border professionally planted perennial gardens centered by an Italian renaissance Court of the Lions 3 tier stone fountain. andy taylor‡, 1.416.960.9995 | andytaylor@sothebysrealty.ca nancy robertson†, 1.905.334.9422 | nrobertson@sothebysrealty.ca
tHe luxurious ritz-Carlton ToronTo, on 183 WeLLingTon sT. W. #4404 | MLs C3541748 $3,995,000 Sophistication and elegance at the residences at the Ritz-Carlton. Enjoy all the amenities of a luxury hotel. Rarely-found three bedroom plus den, approximately 3,200 sq. ft. with a gourmet kitchen and direct elevator access to the suite. 24-hour concierge, valet parking and easy access to shops. andy taylor‡, 1.416.960.9995 | andytaylor@sothebysrealty.ca
Private landmark Waterfront oriLLia, on 768-770 Broadview ave. | MLS X3509850 $2,495,000 One of the most coveted landmark prestige properties on Lake Couchiching. Located on a private point of land, this sun-filled property plus adjacent lot boasts views in all directions. Capture the sunrise on the dock and sunsets from the beach. A spectacular place with endless possibilities. andy taylor‡, 1.416.960.9995 | andytaylor@sothebysrealty.ca michael constable‡, 1.705.794.9500 | mconstable@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
PerfeCt Combination ToronTo, on 37 aLvin ave. | soLd $1,925,000 Two-storey upper apartment reads like a New York brownstone with very large principal rooms, large kitchen with walk out deck and generous bedrooms with en-suite. Previously renovated by renowned designer Joe Brennan. Recently updated main floor. Commercial space is ready for the discerning entrepreneur. Julia Warren†, 1.416.960.9995 | JWarren@sothebysrealty.ca
Yorkville ToronTo, on 77 CharLes sT. W #704 | MLs C3525217 $1,749,000 Sunny, 1,732 sq. ft. suite in a boutique building in Yorkville. Inviting 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom layout with a large terrace overlooking the Toronto skyline. Walk to subway, best schools, Toronto’s finest shopping, restaurants, art galleries and minutes to Financial District. Luxury amenities and two parking spaces included. susan toyne†, 1.416.960.9995 | stoyne@sothebysrealty.ca samantha thomson†, 1.416.960.9995 | sthomson@sothebysrealty.ca
ClassiC beverlY Hills insPired ToronTo, on 54a heaThCoTe ave. | soLd $5,638,000 Classic Beverly Hills is reflected in this outstanding, fully-automated 10,000 sq. ft. smart home with full Tarion warranty. Exceptional details throughout are particularly noteworthy in the grand foyer, with spectacular skylit dome, spacious panelled living and dining rooms, and family great room with classic gourmet kitchen. lucille chenoWeth†, 1.416.960.9995 | lchenoWeth@sothebysrealty.ca robert gordon‡, 1.416.960.9995 | rgordon@sothebysrealty.ca
modern kensinGton loft ToronTo, on 160 BaLdWin sT. #303 | MLs C3608924
$739,000
Authentic wide loft with 13-foot ceilings will grab your heart and stir your imagination. Meticulously renovated former two-bedroom converted into a one-bedroom plus cozy 165 sq. ft. mezzanine nest for house guests. Gorgeous kitchen with grand island that seats eight for dinner. Private condo courtyard for BBQing. Parking for car and bicycle. lisa-marie doorey‡, 1.416.960.9995 | ldoorey@sothebysrealty.ca linda chu‡, 1.416.960.9995 | lchu@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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Pier 27 toWnHouse on toronto’s Waterfront ToronTo, on 29 Queens Quay e Th107 | MLs C3460992 $1,739,000 Two bedroom plus den, open west view of the lake and park, your own private elevator from your parking level directly into townhouse on both levels. Ten ft. ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows, patio with gas hookup. Opportunity to select finishes from developers selection. chantal rosenthal†, 1.416.960.9995 | crosenthal@sothebysrealty.ca
stePs to YonGe & eGlinton ToronTo, on 64 keeWaTin ave. | soLd
$2,400,000
This beautiful home is ideally located in an upscale, urban-lifestyle, neighbourhood in mid-town Toronto’s popular Yonge/Eglinton area. Situated on a 50 x 196.66 ft. park-like lot, it features 4 bedrooms, two fireplaces, walk-outs to a main floor deck as well as a second floor deck overlooking gorgeous gardens. Amongst its many other features is a private drive and single car garage. JosePhine lennon†, 1.416.960.9995 | Jlennon@sothebysrealty.ca
deer Park eleGanCe ToronTo, on 33 deLisLe ave | soLd
$2,100,000
Sophisticated elegance in the premiere building of the Yonge and St. Clair neighbourhood. This well-designed approximately 2,400 sq. ft. split, two bedroom suite offers spacious principal rooms with a solarium and library with a gas fireplace. Bright modern kitchen with sunfilled breakfast area. graham connaughton‡, 1.416.960.9995 | gconnaughton@sothebysrealty.ca
PrinCess anne manor ToronTo, on 68 TWyford rd. | MLs W3569423 $1,200,000 Have you ever imagined yourself in a beautiful home on a coveted street in one of Toronto’s finest neighbourhoods? This lovingly maintained home in Etobicoke could be the one. The basement boasts a large recreation room and also a separate entrance, a second kitchen, and a bedroom. James Killoran†, 1.416.960.9995 | JKilloran@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
exquisite GeorGian estate haMiLTon, on 403 Queen sT. s | MLs x3531869 $3,995,000 Nestled on over an acre, this three-storey spectacular home offers 8,200 plus sq. ft. of living and dining areas, an entertainer’s delight, along with custom chef’s kitchen. French doors open to gorgeous backyard oasis. Seven bedrooms with ensuites includes a luxury master suite with private terrace. cheryl thomPson†, 1.416.960.9995 | cthomPson@sothebysrealty.ca cheryl dorricott†, 1.905.220.3164 | cmdorricott@sothebysrealty.ca
mississauGa, ontario Mississauga , on 1388 sTaveBank rd. | MLs W3369261 $4,500,000 This quality collector house is a rare unique find, perfect for the most discerning buyer, on the most desirable waterfront of the Credit River. This Gren Weis designed house boasts a combination of superb light and views, quality amenities and features with craftsmanship finishes, the likes of which are simply difficult to replicate in Toronto. Walking distance to Kenollie School, GO Train, marina, health services and shops. 20 minutes to downtown Toronto and Toronto Pearson International Airport by car. Kingsley Qin‡, 1.905.845.0024 | KQin@sothebysrealty.ca
landmark Home sPeaks to oakville’s riCH HistorY oakviLLe, on 241 TrafaLgar rd. | MLs 30523133 $2,799,500 This historic landmark property sits proud on a double lot, in the heart of Old Oakville. Renovated top to bottom in 2012, with uncompromising attention to detail and tradition, a magnificent four-bedroom home blends the romantically-inspired Italianate architecture with an interior designed to excite today’s most discerning Buyers. marK boot‡, 1.416.300.4669 | mboot@sothebysrealty.ca dianne boot†, 905.339.7045 | dboot@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
sothebysrealty.ca
modern mineola masterPieCe oakviLLe, on Mississauga | exCLusive
$5,998,888
Stunning modern masterpiece Fully automated for modern living, no detail was overlooked. Custom millwork in every room masterfully blends practicality and design. A short walk to the Port Credit GO station, and the waterfront, with all the amenities the Town of Port Credit offers at your doorstep. Petrus engelbrecht†, 1.905.467.2651 | Pengelbrecht@sothebysrealty.ca Klaudia Zumer†, 1.289.259.4434 | KZumer@sothebysrealty.ca
Golf Course CommunitY bunGaloW WoodBridge, on 93 CLuBhouse rd. | soLd $3,888,000 A rare opportunity to own a home on a showcase lot in this beautiful bespoke community surrounded by the National Golf Course of Canada. Positioned on almost one and a half acres, this home has been carefully and professionally landscaped with in-ground gunite pool, private tennis court, and pool house. Petrus engelbrecht†, 1.905.467.2651 | Pengelbrecht@sothebysrealty.ca
euroPean eleGanCe in oakville oakviLLe, on 192 CharTWeLL rd. MLs | 30523429 $3,495,000 One of the most sought after streets in Oakville. With architectural details of reclaimed European wood flooring from 17th Century France and Renaissance style stone fireplaces, the interior gives the sense of an European villa. Walking distance to Downtown Oakville’s first class shops and fine dining. Petrus engelbrecht†, 1.905.467.2651 | Pengelbrecht@sothebysrealty.ca
burlinGton larGe familY Home BurLingTon, on 116 BireTT dr. | MLs 30527636 $2,499,000 This spectacular home South of Lakeshore sits at the end of a quiet court. Over 4,800 sq. ft. above grade, with 2,900 sq. ft. on the lower level, this home was custom built and carefully planned with an ideal layout. Steps to Lake Ontario and a short drive to Downtown Burlington. Petrus engelbrecht†, 1.905.467.2651 | Pengelbrecht@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
river oaks Gem oakviLLe, on 2241 ToWne BLvd. | MLs 30534540 $1,038,000 Welcome to this stunning family home in River Oaks area of Oakville. Tastefully renovated with quality finishes. Fully finished lower level with spacious recreation room for your enjoyment. Beautiful landscaped pool size backyard ideal for summer entertaining. Just move in and enjoy. Klaudia Zumer†, 1.289.259.4434 | KZumer@sothebysrealty.ca
GraCious estate on over 5 aCres WaTerdoWn, on 265 MiLL sT. s | MLs 30528424
$2,299,000
Welcome to Braebourne Estate, a unique landmark property in historic Smokey Hollow. Circa 1846, one of the area’s original developers built the home for his family. Gracious formal rooms with elegant high ceilings will delight any history buff. Just over five acres, within easy commuter access to city. nancy robertson†, 1.905.334.9422 | nrobertson@sothebysrealty.ca
eleGant & disCerninG CottaGe Niagara-oN-the-Lake, oN 166 Queen sT. | MLs n30051775 $2,995,000 Set in the heart of Niagara-on-the-Lake, this elegant residence dating back to the year 1910 is a real historic gem. The specimen gardens, balconies and decks create a cheerful, bright, airy and useful setting for family getaways. The cottage includes a saltwater pool and volleyball court. nancy braZeau‡, 1.905.468.0001 | nbraZeau@sothebysrealty.ca
eCkersleY mCeWen House C.1830 Niagara-oN-the-Lake, oN 58 Johnson sT. | MLs 30532637
$1,595,000
This historic grand dame occupies her rightful place in the authentic British colonial streetscape. Beautiful mature trees shelter the promenades, all within walking distance of culinary delights, shops full of treasures, theatres, culture and artistry. Presently operating as a very successful bedroom and breakfast. Patricia atherton†, 1.905.933.4983 | Patherton@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
sothebysrealty.ca
80 Liverpool Street Guelph, ON 80 Liverpool St.
$799,900
Welcome to Stonehaven, a truly iconic piece of Guelph history that offers the prospective homeowner an opportunity to enjoy refined living and the additional benefit of a completely separate second-floor apartment. Julie Ashley†, 1.519.841.1924 | jashley@sothebysrealty.ca Albert Ashley†, 1.519.716.1924 | aashley@sothebysrealty.ca, Sarah Rioux†, 1. 519.998.4295 | srioux@sothebysrealty.ca
Century Limestone Masterpiece on 48 Acres Trent Hills, ON 530 5th Line W | MLS X3578016
$1,200,000
An exquisite hillside estate in the beautiful Northumberland Hills. Steeped with historic features and embellished with modern appointments, presenting rolling pasture, pond, paddocks, handsome barn, indoor riding arena, lush grounds, in-ground salt-water pool and cabana. Stunning unparallelled offering. Iris Andrews‡, 1.613.969.2044 | iandrews@sothebysrealty.ca Brian Andrews‡, 1.613.969.2044 | bandrews@sothebysrealty.ca
Waterfront Condominiums Wellington, ON 411 Main St. | Exclusive
Price Upon Request
Life is yours to celebrate where the lake joins the sky in Prince Edward County. Introducing 30 premier boutique condo suites and six savvy townhomes on Lake Ontario. Embrace small scale urban living in Ontario’s most destined wine and gastronomic region. The place to be. Iris Andrews‡, 1.613.969.2044 | iandrews@sothebysrealty.ca Brian Andrews‡, 1.613.969.2044 | bandrews@sothebysrealty.ca twelvetreeswellington.ca
Waterfront Mid Century Modern Leeds and the Thousand Islands, ON 79 Benson Park Rd. | Exclusive $1,700,000 Original owner Ubër cool mid century modern cedar home nestled on a gorgeous, heavily treed double waterfront lot with stunning views of the Thousand Islands and International Bridge. Rarely does the opportunity come along to purchase on the ultra exclusive Hill Island Millionaire’s Row surrounded by National Park with Township maintained road right to your driveway. Pristine deep clean water perfect for swimming and storing your water toys in the permanent boat port with entertaining deck above. Todd Bickerton†, 1.613.217.8683 | tbickerton@sothebysrealty.ca Tony Chard‡, 1.613.540.2280 | tchard@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
Carraig ridge Ghost Lake FoothiLLs, aB saunders architecture t house $2,100,000 Imagine living in your own private park: 650 acres of secluded Canadian landscape, conveniently positioned midway between Calgary and the Town of Banff and overlooking Ghost Lake, are now a hub of contemporary residential design. Only 44 unique homes will ever be built in the community, carefully sited on lots ranging in size from one to five acres. A further 500 acres of this beautiful Rocky Mountain Foothills wilderness will be preserved for the enjoyment of its residents. T House is an exquisite work of contemporary architecture, designed by world-renowned firm Saunders Architecture out of Bergen, Norway. This new construction 2-bedroom, 2.5-bathroom house features breathtaking views of the Rockies, and balances the quiet solitude of country life with the modern amenities and services of a fully-supported community. 41 additional one to five acre lots | $1,000,000 + GST Christian Dubois, Christopher VinCent, Laura Wright 1.403.707.8048 | CanmorebanffreaLestate.Com
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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Canmore, Banff & the roCkies The Canadian Rockies offer an extraordinary lifestyle. Seasons filled with hiking, biking, golfing, fishing, canoeing, skiing, snowshoeing, outdoor concerts and festivals, all while enjoying the area’s world class restaurants, cafés, and arts venues. The vibrant mountain communities of Canmore and Banff are a mere hour from Calgary and its international airport. The opportunities for you and your family are endless, with an enviable selection of mountain estate homes, development lots and condominium properties. Whether you are looking for a new home, weekend retreat, or community to retire to; the mountains provide an inviting and majestic setting for your life all year round. It is no wonder that Canmore is consistently rated one of the best communities in Canada to call home. Christian Dubois, Christopher VinCent, Laura Wright 1.403.707.8048 | CanmorebanffreaLestate.Com
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
the manor house caLGary, aB 6 aspen ridGe Lane sW | c4021040 Price uPon request A rare gem in the heart of prestigious Aspen Estates, this extensively landscaped one-acre property is comprised of two separate titled lots located in a private cul-de-sac of only 12 homes. The Manor House is designed with old world charm featuring luxurious new world amenities and modern convenience in a warm family home. Wrapped entirely in stone, with nearly 10,000 sq. ft. of luxurious living quarters across three levels, the estate is constructed to the highest standards boasting five bedrooms, seven bathrooms, two powder rooms and 1,200 sq. ft. patio. A carriage house (+1,000 sq. ft.) tops a two-level, seven-car garage connected to the main house by enclosed galleria. corinne Poffenroth, 1.403.804.2444 | cPoffenroth@sothebysrealty.ca
kensington Luxury Parkside Living caLGary, aB 1212, 1214 & 1218 5 ave. nW | MLs c4067930
$4,989,300
Luxury parkside living with stunning views of downtown to the south and Riley Park to the north. This incredible property is being offered for the first time with zoning of M-H1 land use with FAR of up to 4. Situated on a 12,500 sq. ft. plot this land is an excellent investment to hold or develop. renata reiD & Jennifer eVeringham, 1.403.630.3991 | rreid@sothebysrealty.ca
exeCutive Lakefront Community caLGary, aB 7 MahoGany isLand se | MLs c4071864
$2,275,850
Largest home on the island. Boasting an immaculate 5,800 sq. ft. of luxurious lakeside living in the gated community of North Island in Mahogany. Dramatic grand open main level with vaulted ceiling and large 14 ft. island adjacent to the elegant family style dining area with floor to ceiling stone wall with fireplace. renata reiD & Jennifer eVeringham 1.403.630.3991 | rreid@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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infinity PooL with mountain views rocky vieW county, aB 43 WestBLuFF ridGe | MLs c4070178
$4,950,000
This Springbank home on a gated three acre ridge lot offers luxury throughout, but the true masterpiece is the indoor infinity/lap pool with site-lines from the water to the panoramic mountain view. Features include a bar, waterslide, gym/yoga studio and sauna, theater room and five-vehicle garages. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
soLd in eLBow Park caLGary, aB 3916 9 st. sW | soLd
$2,899,000
Quality, design, function and a great location in Elbow Park on an oversized lot. Empire Custom Homes has crafted a unique and contemporary style home sure to impress with elegant architecture and design throughout. Located in one of Calgary’s most desired and established neighborhoods. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
soPhistiCated Luxury in eau CLarie caLGary, aB #400G 500 eau cLaire ave. sW | MLs c4066205
$2,500,000
The spacious rooms draw you in and highlight the stunning panoramic river views. Completely renovated with the most stylish of finishes including Calcutta marble, gourmet kitchen, media room and more. Located on the beautiful Bow River & Prince’s Island Park near pathways, shops and restaurants. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
exeCutive famiLy home in aLtadore caLGary, aB 3903 18 st. sW | MLs c4077684
$2,299,900
Classic exterior with contemporary design and finishes throughout, including a feature floating block staircase and city views. The seamless open indoor/outdoor living space is perfect for family living or for hosting friends and family, and the lush landscaping emphasizes the private west backyard. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
mountain views from sPringBank caLGary, aB 10 sLopes Grove sW | MLs c4074062
$1,985,000
With breathtaking mountain views, this custom masterpiece home on a half-acre lot offers a functional open layout and elegance throughout, including a two-storey living room and barrel vaulted ceilings. Take advantage of the private outdoor setting from the wrap-around deck, terrace and walk-out patio. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
soLd in eLBow Park caLGary, aB 3033 7 st. sW | MLs c4072004 | soLd
$1,649,000
Elegance and sophistication in Elbow Park. Set upon a large 75 ft. lot with beautiful west exposure, this home offers a total 3,895 sq. ft. of living space. The main level offers a formal living room as well as an open concept kitchen and family room with access to the private and tranquil outdoor living space. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
soLd in marda LooP caLGary, aB 1712 37 ave. sW | soLd
$1,299,000
Recently renovated with character and charm, this two-storey home in Marda Loop offers just under 3,300 sq. ft. of living space. The exterior is unique, blending modern colours with a large front veranda and mature lush landscaping in the front and back outdoor living spaces. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
BaCking onto goLf Course heritaGe pointe, aB 18 ridGe pointe dr. | MLs c4074667
$974,700
A beautiful and well maintained family home in Heritage Pointe overlooking the golf course. 4,000+ sq. ft. of developed living space with barrel ceiling, arched entryways, triple garage, large deck, meticulous landscaping and a perfect location providing a country atmosphere with city conveniences. dennis Plintz, 1.403.608.1112 | dPlintz@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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© adam stein
Sun PeakS – a SPecial Place
© Kelly funK
Sun Peaks Mountain Resort Municipality is a unique, welcoming, and vibrant community with its own school, numerous hotels, shops and dining options, all within a charming ski-through village and surrounded by unlimited recreational opportunities. Boasting Canada’s 2nd largest ski area and BC’s highest elevation 18-hole golf course, Sun Peaks is located in the province’s sunny interior and is only 4.5 hours from Vancouver. With 4,270 acres of skiable terrain on three diverse mountains, plentiful dry snow, and 2,000 hours of sunshine annually, incredible skiing is a serious understatement. This winter wonderland offers a myriad of activities. Beyond the chairlifts, you will find many additional adventures. From the pristine Nordic network that offers over 34 kilometres of groomed runs and track-set trails to enjoying the snowshoe trails with a local guide, to feeling the wind in your hair as you are pulled on a dogsled by a team of huskies, Sun Peaks has something for everyone. Enjoy a horse drawn sleigh ride, go tubing, skating, the opportunities are plentiful in this quaint community. In summer, experience a beautiful golf course, lift-accessed mountain biking and alpine hiking, plus several nearby lakes for fishing, canoeing and kayaking. Known as ‘Canada’s Alpine Village’, Sun Peaks is quickly evolving into a favourite venue for year-round events and festivals.
© Kelly funK
Office 1.250.578.7773 | lfOrster@sOthebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
PreStigiouS timberframe retreat Sun PeakS, BC 4137 DouglaS Ct. | MlS 129692
$3,595,000
Slopeside timber frame masterpiece offers privacy, convenience, superior design and finish to satisfy the most discriminating buyer. Extensive use of natural rock with embedded fossils, massive fir timbers, walls of windows with panoramic views and covered, heated patio areas. Radiant heat and furnished. liz fOrster, 1.250.682.2289 | lfOrster@sOthebysrealty.ca
timberframe Ski-in/out chalet Sun PeakS, BC 4129 SunDanCe Dr. | MlS 120851
$3,199,000
Exquisite fully furnished timberframe chalet boasts prime ski-in/ski-out location in four season Sun Peaks Mountain Resort Municipality. Luxury, quality and fine craftsmanship are evident at every turn. Includes true chef’s kitchen, floor-to-ceiling rock fireplace, reclaimed hickory flooring and theatre room. liz fOrster, 1.250.682.2289 | lfOrster@sOthebysrealty.ca
SloPe Side mountain chalet Sun PeakS, BC 4121 SunDanCe Dr. | MlS 131978
$2,990,000 gst applicable
Premium ski-in/out chalet provides owners the exclusivity of returning from village shopping on the Platter Lift that conveniently brings you home. This custom chalet boasts massive, curved spanning timbers combined with generous use of real rock, copper, rich hardwood flooring and oil rubbed bronze. liz fOrster, 1.250.682.2289 | lfOrster@sOthebysrealty.ca
imPreSSive mountain/valley viewS Sun PeakS, BC 4253 Bella ViSta Dr. | MlS 131145
$2,399,000
If take-your-breath-away mountain, valley and village views impress you, then you must step onto the expansive decks of this attractive log post and beam chalet. Featuring ski-in/ski-out convenience, gourmet kitchen, media and games room, fully furnished, hot tub, heated driveway, large double garage and fully furnished. liz fOrster, 1.250.682.2289 | lfOrster@sOthebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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weStSide revenue Potential VanCouVer, BC 5705 alMa St. & laneway HoMe | SolD
$3,188,000
Immaculate 3,200 sq. ft. family home with an income generating laneway on 50 x 136 ft. lot. The home features seven bedrooms and the option to convert the basement into a three-bedroom suite with the turn of a key. Enjoy additional revenue from the 1,131 sq. ft., three bedroom laneway home custom built by Smallworks. andie sKene, 1.604.762.2215 | asKene@sOthebysrealty.ca cheryl nadeau, 1.604.802.0001 | cnadeau@sOthebysrealty.ca
excePtional edgemont living nortH VanCouVer, BC 943 BeauMont Dr. | MlS r2095845
$3,899,000
Very elegant and stunning custom-finished executive home. Indoor outdoor living at its finest; more to offer than most new homes. 4,800 sq. ft. of designer finishes, a perfect floor-plan and air-conditioned. Having spent substantially on the grounds, you’ll see nothing has been overlooked. Only 6 years old. clive benjafield , 1.604.803.5050 | cbenjafield@sOthebysrealty.ca prec
steve mitchell, 1.604.418.6726 | smitchell@sOthebysrealty.ca
one level craftSman rancher weSt VanCouVer, BC 322 Moyne Dr. | MlS 3248000 $3,248,000 Offering a fabulously appointed 2,525 sq. ft. home featuring a craftsman ranch-styled Lower British Properties home. Situated on a sensational sunny 12,105 sq. ft. lot, home offers an open floor plan, 4 bedrooms and a walkout sundrenched patio off of family room. 5 minutes to Park Royal, Collingwood School, Capilano Golf & Hollyburn Country Clubs. Perfect for families and entertainment lifestyles. Located in a quiet community neighbourhood close to great hiking trails. One level living at its finest. Karen huttOn, 1.604.220.7447 | KhuttOn@sOthebysrealty.ca
charming beach drive home ViCtoria, BC 2424 BeaCH Dr. | MlS 368371
$1,450,000
Elegant restored 1922 home overlooking Willows Beach in prestigious Oak Bay. Offering five bedrooms, three bathrooms in 2,700 sq. ft. of living space. Open floor plan with wood floors, solid wood maple cabinets, built in dining hutch, perfect for entertaining family and friends and in a gorgeous central location. sOphia briggs, 1.250.418.5569 | sbriggs@sOthebysrealty.ca nancy strattOn, 1.250.857.5482 | nstrattOn@sOthebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
Exquisite Oceanfront Hideaway Victoria, bc 2560 Queenswood Dr. | MLS 367069 $8,250,000 Magnificent 6,638 sq. ft. home on a headland of almost two acres in Victoria’s premier suburb. The home flows effortlessly from the exquisite interior to the sheltered patio and fire pit overlooking the Salish Sea. Mountains and islands are a spectacular backdrop to moon rises and sunrises. Glynis MacLeod , 1.250.380.3933 | gmacleod@sothebysrealty.ca prec
www.glynismacleod.com
Magnificent Arts & Craft Victoria, BC 610 St. Charles St. | MLS SIRC137601
$2,300,000
Resplendent in fine detailing this 1912 home has been meticulously restored with modern conveniences. The authentic 6,311 sq. ft. mansion is Victoria’s only original grand California Arts & Crafts style home. The impressive foyer is a gateway to the masterful craftsmanship of the era. Glynis MacLeod , 1.250.380.3933 | gmacleod@sothebysrealty.ca prec
www.glynismacleod.com
West Coast Marvel Victoria, BC 1946 Crescent Rd. | MLS 366550
$2,995,000
Breathtaking views define this West Coast gem. Overlooking Gonzales Bay to the Olympic Mountains, this 5,200 sq. ft. home captures everything to love about Victoria living. The open lay out spills with natural light as the home is highlighted by expansive balconies, rich detailing and plush amenities. Andy Stephenson, 1.250.532.0888 | astephenson@sothebysrealty.ca
Remarkable Hilltop Sanctuary Victoria, BC 3875 Munn Rd. | MLS 367828
$1,298,000
Your sanctuary awaits with this brilliant Highlands home offering striking views of Victoria to the ocean as it spans over a rugged 13 acres. Tailor-made for the outdoors lover, this is as much a lifestyle as a home making it the perfect retreat from the city buzz while keeping downtown accessible. Andy Stephenson, 1.250.532.0888 | astephenson@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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160-acre oceanview eState Salt SPring iSlanD, BC 455 BlaCkBurn rD. | MlS SirC118001
$2,985,000
This extraordinary ocean view estate offers supreme privacy with vast panoramic views, rolling hills, wooded trails and serene open spaces in blissful abundance. The modern 4,300 sq. ft. mountain house welcomes with casual elegance, while a separate caretakers home is privately sited for guests. chris hObbs, 1.250.537.1778 | chObbs@sOthebysrealty.ca darlene hObbs, 1.250.537.1778 | dhObbs@sOthebysrealty.ca
rural nirvana Salt SPring iSlanD, BC 128 HolMeS rD. | MlS SirC75838
$1,745,000
Charismatic six acre country home and coach house collaborated by a talented team of design, construction and landscape professionals. Style and comfort pervade the interiors, with the impeccable design and seamless proportion that embody a properly formed environment for living like no other. chris hObbs, 1.250.537.1778 | chObbs@sOthebysrealty.ca darlene hObbs, 1.250.537.1778 | dhObbs@sOthebysrealty.ca
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E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
hig h l ig h t s A closer view at some of British Columbia’s most coveted listings
custom ski-in/out mountain HomE Sun PeakS, Bc 4118 SunDance Dr. | MlS 125826
$1,549,500
Architecturally designed to complement its gradually sloping corner lot, this attractive custom mountain home offers the convenience of true ski-in/skiout and level entry access. Constructed with posts and beams in the main living area, custom cabinetry, wood and rock feature walls and stained glass. Furnished. Liz Forster, 1.250.682.2289 | lforster@sothebysrealty.ca
award winning cHalEt Sun PeakS, Bc 4238 Bella ViSta Dr. | MlS 135148
$1,499,000
Overlooking mountains and village, this Tommie award-winning custom chalet features outstanding views with wall of windows and spacious decks from every room to take full advantage of its lofty location. Enjoy this true ski-in/ ski-out location with convenient foyer, ski locker and hot tub at the back door. Fully furnished. Liz Forster, 1.250.682.2289 | lforster@sothebysrealty.ca
ExcEptional luxury & convEniEncE Sun PeakS, Bc 4202 Bella ViSta Dr. | MlS 130411
$1,788,000
Exceptional, true ski-in/ski-out, timber frame home features walls of windows and spacious decks overlooking charming ‘Canada’s Alpine Village’ and the nation’s second largest ski area. Offering several inviting options for large group entertainment or quiet personal retreats, soaring ceilings in the great room, rustic wood inlays with character touches, spiral staircases and grand fireplaces, this unique mountain home is conveniently located just steps from restaurants, shopping and entertainment and the gateway to a huge expanse of year round recreational trails. From the inviting family area complete with games room, attractive bar and wine room, to the gourmet kitchen with top notch Dacor appliances, and the sunken soaker tub in the master suite, luxury and convenience abound. The piece de resistance is the magnificent view through tilted floor to ceiling windows and from the spacious wraparound deck boasting outdoor kitchen with pizza oven, gas fireplace and infinity hot tub with cascading waterfall. Radiant heat, fully furnished, double garage. Ask about quarter ownership option. Liz Forster, 1.250.682.2289 | lforster@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
ski-in/out luxurious log HomE Sun PeakS, Bc 5318 lookout riDge Dr. | MlS 135176
$1,349,000
Every detail in this furnished log home has been considered so you can enjoy the warmth only log construction can provide, along with luxury and elegance. Traditional appliances, comfortable radiant in-floor heating, theatre room, two car garage with additional ‘toy garage’, mountain views and more. Liz Forster, 1.250.682.2289 | lforster@sothebysrealty.ca
boasting swEEping mountain viEws Sun PeakS, Bc 2217 SunBurSt Dr. | MlS 132133
$1,325,000
Providing easy ski-in/out access to the main chairlifts and boasting sweeping mountain views and sunshine all day long; this nearly new, Kettle River timber frame home includes imported stone from Montana, reclaimed pine flooring, rich granite counter tops and inviting level entry into living space. Liz Forster, 1.250.682.2289 | lforster@sothebysrealty.ca
ExcEptional outdoor EntErtaining WeSt VancouVer, Bc 1020 MatherS aVe. | MlS r2088884 $2,288,000 Location, location, location. This beautifully-kept south-facing family home was renovated with permits in 2010. This five-bedroom, three-bathroom house has beautiful hardwood floors as well as a designer kitchen. New lighting, blinds, drapes and millwork. Two bedroom suite with separate entrance, private walk out and garden patio. Entertainers back yard with a peek-a-boo view. Karen hutton, 1 604.220.7447 | Khutton@sothebysrealty.ca
sunsEt gardEns contEmporary north VancouVer, Bc 4136 SunSet BlVD. | MlS r2082541 $3,988,000 Impeccable 5,000 sq. ft. family home with fabulous finishing, high ceilings and bright floor plan. Six bedrooms and five bathrooms. Spectacular master bedroom with fabulous ensuite. The dining room leads to a covered deck and chef’s kitchen. The nook leads to an open deck and patio. Basement suite. Walk to Edgemont Village. clive benjafield , 1 604.803.5050 | cbenjafield@sothebysrealty.ca Prec
steve Mitchell, 1 604.418.6726 | sMitchell@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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timElEss Quality Victoria, Bc 8285 lochSiDe Dr. | SolD
$2,285,000
Mesmerizing ocean and island vistas greet your senses from this handsome 5,438 sq. ft. home on a 91-acre oceanfront lot. Principal rooms enjoy views with access to an entertainment-sized deck. Fabulous designer kitchen, a treat for any chef. Comfortable stairway access to the beach. Glynis Macleod , 1 250.380.3933 | aGenteMail@sothebysrealty.ca Prec
GlynisMacleod.coM
ExcEptional EstatE Victoria, Bc 8140 Marcott cloSe | SolD
$3,500,000
Rising above magical Mt. Newton Valley is this 6,700 sq. ft. Chateauinspired 2010 masterpiece, providing exquisite comfort for the discerning buyer with more than 11-acres, a two-bedroom cottage and barn. The sunny vantage point provides magnificent vistas towards the ocean in the east and Mt. Newton Valley to the south. Glynis Macleod , 1.250.380.3933 | GMacleod@sothebysrealty.ca Prec
GlynisMacleod.coM
tHE rEEf Victoria, Bc 503 - 21 EriE St. | Sold $725,000 A dazzling southeast corner unit in one of Victoria’s most iconic buildings. The palatial open-floor plan features a south terrace with ocean views and boat moorage nearby. An architectural triumph, this refined apartment presents the rare opportunity to live in the hub of the Inner Harbour. andy stePhenson, 1.250.532.0888 | astePhenson@sothebysrealty.ca
cook st. villagE luxury Victoria, Bc 1162 May St. | MlS 366985
$1,250,000
A beautiful family home in the heart of Cook Street Village, just steps from Beacon Hill Park and the picturesque Dallas road. The house features grand living rooms, Brazilian Cherry hardwood floors, open chef’s kitchen, lavish finishing and private patios that continue the tranquility of this space. andy stePhenson, 1.250.532.0888 | astePhenson@sothebysrealty.ca
Sotheby’s International Realty Canada
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
tHE manor on morningsidE Salt SPring iSlanD, Bc 241 MorningSiDe rD. | MlS 360837
$4,880,000
A 7,354 sq. ft. residence of innovative design, unrivalled artisanship and resplendent form set on a remarkable 450-feet stretch of low bank shoreline with sunny coves, waterfall and dual mooring buoys. Luxurious guest annex and swim spa. The southwest-facing 1 1/4-acre grounds and zen gardens are simply sensational. chris hobbs, 1.250.537.1778 | chobbs@sothebysrealty.ca darlene hobbs, 1.250.537.1778 | dhobbs@sothebysrealty.ca
statEly ocEanfront villa Salt SPring iSlanD, Bc 133 alDerS aVe. | MlS 366985
$2,950,000
The easy rhythm of fine design welcomes at this exceptional beach house. Classic coastal elegance and meticulous design principles throughout an energetic 6,330 sq. ft. floor plan. Choreographed gardens, artisan stonework, illuminated pathways, level lawns and driveway to level walk on oceanfront with buoy. chris hobbs, 1.250.537.1778 | chobbs@sothebysrealty.ca darlene hobbs, 1.250.537.1778 | dhobbs@sothebysrealty.ca
Extraordinary ocEanfront Salt SPring iSlanD, Bc 1293 Mountain rD. | MlS 359381 $2,895,000 Extraordinary 37.5-acre assemblage at Cape Keppel. Nearly 2,000 ft. of southwest beachfront affords breathtaking natural beauty and absolute privacy. Private deep water dock, charming boathouse with loft apartment. Seven strata titled lots with power and water. Opportunity for a private estate or development. andie sKene, 1 604.762.2215 | asKene@sothebysrealty.ca cheryl nadeau, 1 604.802.0001 | cnadeau@sothebysrealty.ca andieandcheryl.coM
wEst coast watErfront HomE Saturna iSlanD, Bc 150 trueWorthy rD. | MlS 362996
$1,395,000
Welcome to 150 Trueworthy Road: a custom, true West Coast style home located on Saturna Island. Situated on high bank, on 1.75-acres of land overlooking the majestic views and vistas of Plumper Sound and Navy Passage. Exquisite finishings, open beams, hand-milled wood floors and reclaimed timber. soPhia briGGs, 1.250.418.5569 | sbriGGs@sothebysrealty.ca nancy stratton 1.250.857.5482 | nstratton@sothebysrealty.ca
E&O.E: This information is from sources which we deem reliable, but must be verified by prospective purchasers and may be subject to change or withdrawal. *Real Estate Broker, **Certified Real Estate Broker, ±Residential Real Estate Broker, †Sales Representative, ‡Broker, PREC Personal Real Estate Coorporation. Real estate agency. Sotheby’s International Realty Québec. Sotheby’s International Realty Canada, Brokerage. Independently Owned & Operated.
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