“It’s a very outdoor and sports-oriented area of Canada,” Brown says. “Originally, the living room had a very cliche ‘mountain’ aesthetic with rustic river rock and a wood mantel around the fireplace. And although it had lots of windows, the dated decor choices made it feel dark and small.” Brown knew that the living area would be where the family would gather most, naturally, and so she aimed to make it feel as welcoming and comfortable as possible. The existing room sat next to a covered deck, which the owners seldom used, and Brown thought that it made more sense to absorb the deck into the new footprint. “By enclosing that space as part of the living room, we increased the square footage and also gained more flexibility and openness for how furniture could be arranged.” Her team removed the heavy stone and wood mantel from the fireplace and replaced it with a sleek concrete tile, and then installed classic hardwood flooring and painted the walls white to bring more sunlight in. “I think that brightening and modernizing spaces is something very common for us, but the use of wide-plank wood on the ceiling was actually a surprise suggestion from the client, and we feel it was a really great addition,” Brown says. “Looking back, I don’t think the space would have the same feel or appeal if it just had a white drywall ceiling.” When it came time to furnish, Brown aimed to make the palette feel like it belonged in the mountains but had a decidedly modern, Pacific Northwest personality. She designed a custom sectional to be as large as possible for the layout, and upholstered it in a charcoal-colored wool. “It has a hint of blue, and that darkness grounds the otherwise airy quality of the room,” she says. A built-in, floating cabinet incorporates storage and acts as a place for the TV to rest somewhat out of sight (a pull-out arm makes it visible to every seat, without dominating the area above the fireplace). Finally, an oversized lamp above the sectional adds an element of coziness, and the wood coffee table coordinates with the rest of the surrounding grains. “Behind the sectional is a raised console table, too, where people can perch and eat or drink while being part of the group,” she notes. It’s been five years since Brown completed this update, and the home still looks fresh and inviting without feeling too on the nose—exactly as she had hoped. “The clean lines and light palette lean slightly Scandinavian, but overall it still feels very West Coast,” she says.

Get the Look: