Step into the Guilbault Residence, and you’ll feel it—the quiet hum of history brushing against contemporary flair. This isn’t just a house; it’s a love letter to timeless design, penned in walnut, brass, and quartzite. Montreal’s Ingrid Interiors didn’t just decorate a space; they orchestrated a symphony of textures, where every curve and corner sings.
Like a master tailor stitching a bespoke suit, the studio draped this Longueuil home in layers of intention. Custom millwork hugs the walls like heirloom jewelry, while La Cornue’s gas range winks from the kitchen—a nod to both function and flair. The result? A sanctuary that feels lived-in yet luxurious, as if the walls themselves have stories to whisper.
"This project was a dance between eras," admits the studio’s founder, Ingrid Hategan. "We wanted heritage to flirt with modernity—without either losing its voice." The award-winning design proves it’s possible: here, a vintage chandelier might cast shadows on a minimalist console, and no one questions the pairing.
In an age of disposable trends, the Guilbault Residence stands as a rebuttal. It’s a space that rewards patience—where the grain of the wood, the weight of a drawer pull, the play of light through sheer drapes reveal themselves slowly. This isn’t design for Instagram; it’s design for lifetimes.
For those who believe luxury should be felt as much as seen, Ingrid Interiors offers a blueprint: spaces that don’t shout, but compel you to lean closer. And in Quebec’s competitive design landscape, that’s a language worth speaking fluently.