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A back-alley shack is turned into an impressively spacious house filled with sun and wood

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Home of the Week, 2 Miles Place, Toronto. Asking price: $829,000. Selling price: $829,000. When owner Jeff Pangman, an actor and TV producer, discovered it on a walk with his dog in 2006, the building was a pink, vinyl-siding garage with a few misplaced windows. “A shack,” Mr. Pangman says. “Just a shack in a laneway.”Brad Quan

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Mr. Pangman bought the property for $159,000. After that he lived in the shack while he started on his “scribbles,” sketching out different ideas for what could stand in same tiny lot. “I knew that I had to live with the original footprint, so that’s how the cantilever idea came to be,” says Mr. Pangman. “I figured if I cantilevered out over the driveway, I’d be able to maximize the living space by going up and making something interesting.”Brad Quan

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Inside, the home has a modern aesthetic. “I really wanted to design something with clean lines and I was big into wood,” Mr. Pangman said. And rich, warm Douglas fir and oak woods are all over the house: staircases, window and door trim, even the ceiling.Brad Quan

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Mr. Pangman says one of the most peaceful spots in the house is the staircase from the main living space on the second floor to the rooftop deck. ‘[During construction] I spent the most time at the top of those stairs,” Mr. Pangman says, “just staring down, looking down at the space.”Brad Quan

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The glass doors that connect the rooftop deck with the barn roof allow natural light to flood the interior. “The sun carves across and into the house – even in the winter – all day through those sliding glass doors,” Mr. Pangman said.Brad Quan

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The ceiling on the second floor, which is one multi-purpose open space, has a barn roof shape. The idea came after Mr. Pangman took his drawings to architect Terence Van Elslander. He suggested he vault the roof up and curve it out.Brad Quan

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From the outside, the house has an industrial feel, with its exposed steel beams, wooden and corrugated metal sides and asymmetrical windows.Brad Quan

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