dark mode light mode Search
Search

Matière Première Architecture Elevates Cedar-Clad Perchée House Above a Quebec Hillside

Perchée house by Matière Première Architecture nestled in a North Hatley forest during autumn.

Ian Balmorel

A silent dialogue with the forest welcomes those who approach this new architectural intervention in the heart of North Hatley, Canada, where the rolling topography of the Eastern Townships meets the dense hush of maple groves. Here, the landscape is not a mere backdrop but an active protagonist that prompted Matière Première Architecture to opt for a strategy of sophisticated suspension. The residence, named Perchée, does not seek to dominate the terrain; instead, it settles with a restraint that prioritizes total immersion among the trees, limiting clearing to the absolute minimum to preserve the integrity of the soil and that “perched” sensation that defines its very essence.

Close-up of the cantilevered wooden deck with modern outdoor furniture at Perchée house.
The longitudinal cantilever creates a generous outdoor living room that hovers above the forest floor.

The linguistic and structural roots of the project are reflected in its name—a French term that honors the team’s cultural origins and the Francophone landscape of Quebec. Rather than a simple label, the word describes a system of horizontal planes and overhanging roofs that function as precise optical instruments, framing the forest not as a static image, but as a physical extension of the domestic spaces. This approach, while echoing a certain Eastern sensibility, remains deeply anchored in a Northern reading of the relationship between building and site, where climate and morphology are integrated as fundamental parameters of the architectural language.

Aerial sunset view of Perchée house submerged in a dense multi-colored forest canopy.
An aerial perspective reveals the project’s immersion within the vast Francophone landscape of Quebec.

The fluidity of sheltered spaces transforms the idea of a home into an experience of spatial continuity that goes far beyond the visual transparency of large glass panes. Moving through Perchée means perceiving a gradual shift between tempered rooms and naturally ventilated environments, where protected outdoor areas occupy nearly the same footprint as the interior. This philosophy finds its peak expression in the volume designed for the car; rather than a closed, isolated garage, it is an outdoor room “in reserve,” ready to transform into a terrace or flexible threshold when the car is absent, multiplying inhabitable square footage without increasing the volumetric impact.

Detail of custom wooden kitchen cabinetry with fluted glass accents in Perchée house.
Bespoke millwork in select spruce combines functionality with a delicate, rhythmic materiality.

The technical precision of the longitudinal cantilever responds primarily to a logic of environmental protection, allowing the house to project toward the slope without interfering with the root systems of mature trees. This choice generates a peripheral walkway and an eight-foot-deep sheltered zone at the garden level, facing the pool to create a liminal area that is neither fully inside nor outside. It is a search for equilibrium that recalls the sensitivity typical of modern vernacular design in Quebec, much like the principles seen in the authentic and landscape-driven character of Chalet du Ruisseau, where architecture acts as a respectful bridge between human heritage and the strength of the wild.

Open-plan living area at Perchée featuring a built-in library and a white modern fireplace.
Ten-foot ceilings and clerestory windows create a sense of lightness and spatial continuity within the interior.

A choreography of light and local materials defines the atmosphere of the interior, where ten-foot ceilings and a continuous clerestory band visually detach the partitions from the roof plane. This architectural gap allows natural light to glide across the surfaces without the harshness of direct sun, filtered by the generous roof overhangs that modulate the seasons. The material palette is one of regional rigor: select spruce from Northern Quebec provides a consistent warmth to the living spaces, while white cedar—treated with a weathering accelerator—wraps the exterior envelope. Over time, this skin will develop a silver patina, further embedding the house into the grey-brown tones of the woods.

Modern bathroom at Perchée house with a glass-enclosed wet room and a freestanding tub.
The bathroom’s design utilizes high clerestory windows to maintain privacy while welcoming natural light.

The art of inhabiting the slope culminates in a residence that functions as a quiet observatory. Every piece of custom millwork, from the wood-framed glass panels to the built-in library, oscillates between solidity and delicacy, asserting a vocabulary where wood remains dominant without ever weighing the space down. By rejecting the urge to correct the terrain through heavy foundations, Matière Première Architecture has created a sanctuary that finds its balance through tension. Perchée stands as a testament to the power of subtle intervention, proving that in the delicate ecosystem of North Hatley, the most profound architectural statements are often those that tread most lightly.

Image courtesy of Ian Balmorel

Sign up to our newsletters and we’ll keep you in the loop with everything good going on in the creative world.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*