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Omar Gandhi Architect’s Lady Marmalade is Our Restaurant of the Year

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How an old row house became the airy new digs of a cult Leslieville brunch spot

After nearly a decade in Leslieville, Lady Marmalade’s owners commissioned Omar Gandhi Architect (OGA), in collaboration with SvN Architects + Planners, to transform a boarded-up East Chinatown row house into the new home of their popular brunch destination. To say this was a tall order is something of an understatement.

Interior of Lady Marmalade with seating area and people dining - Omar Gandhi architect

“It was tough to see how this could become a bright, airy brunch spot,” says Omar Gandhi, principal of OGA, about the narrow site. “It was a reductive, or subtractive, method of sculpting, where we really just took things away.”

Lady Marmalade co-owner Natalia Simachkevitch - Omar Gandhi architect

Lady Marmalade co-owner Natalia Simachkevitch

And so out went large sections of floor plate. In went rear windows and skylights, then every wall, beam and ceiling was clad in blond-hued Baltic birch, pushing the aesthetic limits of what’s possible within Toronto’s characteristically narrow architectural footprint.

From the street, only cedar cladding, a large storefront window and understated sans-serif lettering signal the massive shift inside, where the triple-height entryway now provides a common feature from the ground level up through the mezzanine. Every bit materially consistent, birch banquettes and Wegneresque furniture run the length of the dining spaces on the first two storeys, as does flora that provides both sound baffling and an unstructured contrast to the clean, rectangular panelling and slate grey tile.

Cedar cladding at entrance of restaurant Lady Marmalade - Omar Gandhi architect

Architect Omar Gandhi added cedar cladding to the building’s original brickwork.

The space is sunny, warm and unostentatious; a complete design U-turn. But with hearty favourites like the Huevos Migas – a vibrant scramble of eggs, sausage, black beans and pico de gallo – still on the menu, long-time regulars will be pleased to know that, despite the new surroundings, not everything at Lady Marmalade has changed. OMARGANDHI.COM; SVN-AP.COM; LADYMARMALADE.CA

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The East End neighbourhood is more than just a place for families to buy homes—spend a day discovering all of the dining and design options Leslieville has to offer

Known for its plentiful cafes, vintage shops and red brick semis, Leslieville is a great place to walk around for the day. Use this itinerary to hop from hidden gem restaurants to design destinations, starting and ending on Gerrard Street East. From a cult-favourite sourdough pizza spot to a gallery filled with Canadian artists and a place to pause for a mindfulness moment—consider this your guide to the perfect walkable loop of the ‘ville.

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