Their favourite meals end up in their family cookbook with titles like, “So good, it’s baaaad roast leg of lamb” and “Even better when you are pregnant buttermilk panna cotta.” The “In-your-face cake batter” recipe already has a decent dusting of flour.
When the Natarajs started looking for a new home, they were of the same mind: They wanted a modern home. “At the time we were looking, there weren’t a lot of modern houses – though now there are, which is an interesting change in Edmonton’s housing market,” says Viji. The lack of inventory led them to build and three years ago, on the day of their engagement party, they purchased a large lot in Glenora.
While Andrew is a neurosurgeon by trade, he “designed the bones of the house,” and then his friend, Jim Argent, a hobby architect, “finessed it,” he says. Viji, a former school psychologist who now stays home with her son, contributed with a constant stream of pictures mined from magazines and their regular travels and hotel stays.
The finished product is exactly what they imagined. “I went through the old books of images that I liked and collected for this project,” says Viji, “and, if you put it all together, it really does look like our house.”
Their final layout is etched in the frosting of the extra-wide, German-engineered front door. The entry hall leads into the main living space where five elements repeat throughout the interior and exterior design. Glass, steel, cultured stone, quartz and wood all accent a sea of white that bleaches the walls, coffered ceilings, furniture and kitchen cabinetry.
The magic of this space lies in its openness to the Edmonton sun. It pours through the walls of windows, clerestories and glass railings.It bounces off the steel stairs (a feat of brilliance by iron work artisans, Hammer & Forge: A long sheet of steel is folded like a paper fan into risers and treads). It refracts from mango-sized, Italian Terzani crystal pieces that hang from the entrance’s ceiling like raindrops. The columns of cultured stone and dark Brazilian hardwood then absorb the yellow light, radiating energy long after the sun sets.