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A Classical Ballet Academy Finds an Unlikely New Home

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Batay-Csorba Architects bring a West Coast ballet school to suburbia

When Chan Hon Goh’s parents – both professional dancers – drove past a 1912 neoclassical building in Vancouver in the late ’70s, the ballerinas fell hard. “This looks like a classical academy. This looks like a dance school,” they gushed. In 1985, they founded the Goh Ballet Academy in that same heritage building. Today, Goh, a former principal dancer at the National Ballet of Canada, has established an outpost at the Bayview Village mall in North York.

Goh Ballet Academy

Goh Ballet Academy

Sure, the beige plaza is a far cry from the family’s West Coast jewel. But thanks to Batay-Csorba Architects, Goh has pulled off a light landing in suburbia. An accordion-like wall treatment, a vividly pink ceiling, starry suspension lights and plenty of headspace (for those lifts!) ease the transition from shopping concourse to graceful school. batay-csorba.com

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Designed and built by its homeowner, the residence uses more than 30 slabs of Italian marble

Walk through the front door, and it’s the first thing you feel: thick slabs of Calacatta Vagli wrapping the kitchen walls and island; a block of travertine floating above a dark Pietra Grey hearth in the family room; and deep, aubergine-veined Calacatta Viola unfurling dramatically across the ensuite bathroom. Throughout this new build in Toronto’s Sherwood Park neighbourhood—appropriately dubbed Vaglihome—stone defines every moment.

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