The Baldwin House is a two storey modern post and beam structure, located on the southern shore of Deer Lake in Burnaby. It is valued as a prime example of Burnaby’s post Second World War modern heritage and progressive architectural style, as well as for its personal connections to internationally acclaimed architect, Arthur Erickson.
A cohesive expression of simple orthogonal lines and ultimate transparency, this structure reduces the idea of post and beam west coast modernism to its most refined elements. A fine example of the evolving talent of Erickson’s earlier work, this house is a landmark modern house in Burnaby and is unique in terms of sitting context.
Having just won the 1963 competition for the new Simon Fraser University in Burnaby with his partner, Geoff Massey, and having built fewer than half a dozen homes previously, Erickson’s reputation was growing and his skill as a designer of modern buildings was in great demand. The same year that Erickson/Massey Architects designed SFU, Dr. William Baldwin and his wife, Ruth, personal friends of Erickson, commissioned him to design this house. Erickson was already familiar with the site; as a child he had spent time at this spot when his family visited friends who lived on Deer Lake. Both the Baldwin House and the university were completed in 1965. Only a single storey of this two storey house is visible from the road, as it is built into the hillside in response to its steep site and proximity to Deer Lake. Like many other Erickson designs, this structure was conceived as a pavilion. Constructed of glass and wood, its transparency facilitates visual access to the lake’s edge, acting as an invitation, rather than a barrier, to the landscape. The house blends into the natural surroundings and the site includes other man-made landscape features such as a reflecting pool.
The refined and purposeful design, transparency, openness of plan and adjacency to the lake combine to give the house a floating appearance at the water’s edge.
The concept of a floating house set within an accompanying garden was inspired, in part, by the palaces and house boats of Dal Lake in Kashmir and the famed nearby Mughal Gardens. Although Erickson never visited Dal Lake, he travelled extensively throughout India, and specifically mentions the Kashmir reference in relation to this house.
Widely renowned as Canada’s most brilliant modern architect, Erickson’s reputation is important to the development and growth of modern architecture in Canada and North America.
Character-Defining Elements at Baldwin House
- orthogonal plan and massing, with flat tar and gravel roof
- wood and glass used as primary building materials
- transparency and light achieved by the abundant use of glass
- stepped down massing orienting the house towards the water
- large undivided sheets of single glazing
- horizontal flush cedar siding
- use of salvaged brick for chimneys
- use of chains as downspouts
- built in rooftop barbeque (no longer in use)
- post and beam construction, with the width of the beams matched to the width of the posts
- abundant and generous balconies, which blur the transition from interior to exterior
- built in furniture and fittings dating to the time of construction, such as original hardware, benches, bathroom vanities and kitchen cabinets
- landscaped site including reflecting pool, plantings and a dock protruding into the lake (no longer on site)
Source: Heritage Site Files: PC77000 20. City of Burnaby Planning and Building Department
Baldwin House is available for rentals. Please click here for rate and rental information.















