Skip to Main Content
Advertisement

Inside the Secret World of Studio Paolo Ferrari

Advertisement

Meet the enigmatic creative challenging the reputation of Canadian design on a global level

At the foot of Liberty Village, a towering wooden door stands mysteriously among the crumbling, graffitied walls of an alleyway. Once, it led to a secret sex club overlooking the Gardiner — before that, a foundry and warehouse for the Canada Metal Company. Those pasts are a far cry from the elegances that now live within. Today, the door opens to the transformative studio of Studio Paolo Ferrari.

Paolo Ferrari

Although only three years into his own practice, the interiors and furniture designer can hardly be labelled a novice. He reigned as design director at the risk-taking firm Yabu Pushelberg for six years before breaking out on his own, citing a desire to harness the unique possibilities of being a globally minded designer in a city like Toronto.

True to plan, his inaugural projects have taken him around the world. For a subterranean speakeasy in Dubai with fingerprint access, Ferrari devised an interior straight out of a dystopian film about the future’s elite — complete with a covetous classical aesthetic and a bathroom that uses bronze tinted glass to travel into infinity.

Drawing of sofa chairs

Ferrari references Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey as one inspiration for the otherworldly interior, noting that he also loves Fellini and Godard. “These filmmakers created iconic moments that you can’t really inhabit, but you can experience. I’m saying, let’s inhabit them now, in our own way.”

Extra Low Rolled Back Lounge sofa chair

Outfitting the space is seating from Ferrari’s furniture series, Editions. His third collection — made by hand in Toronto — was released in 2019 to international fanfare, featuring a mohair sofa-chair that can seat up to 10 on its extra-low arms and backrest, and an off-balance lounger with an extraordinary sculptural profile.

Perhaps not what you’d expect from a Toronto-born OCAD U alum who came up in the brick-and-beam resurgence of the early aughts. “There are certain parts of the world that have a heavy [design] history, like an Italian designer born in Milan, or a French designer born in Paris,” Ferrari says. “That baggage is pretty heavy. In Canada, there’s a cultural ambiguity — there’s kind of no expectations.”

Paolo Ferrari is in his studio discussing the details of a project with a colleague

If that’s true, Canada’s undogmatic order clearly works for the imaginative designer. In the next three years, he’ll participate in some of the country’s most important developments. In the Ottawa area, he’s rethought the sales centre of Canada’s first One Planet Community into Zibi House, an immersive site filled with experience rooms that celebrate the indigenous roots and biodiversity of the area. In the coming year, he’ll reimagine the lobbies of seven forgotten office towers across downtown Toronto, including a modernist gem by Peter Dickinson. Perhaps most auspiciously, he’s been named the interior design consultant of Forma, the 81-storey Frank Gehry tower set to rise at King and Duncan streets in 2022.

Studio Paolo Ferrari

The logistics won’t be a problem. Studio Paolo Ferrari’s portfolio boasts large-scale hotel interiors as well as two astounding residences in Muskoka. But despite all his experience, the designer says he still likes to ask the “stupid question” — that which often accompanies the innocence of pure imagination. Can a single chair seat an entire dinner party? Can a tiny washroom feel as large as the universe? “In that naivete there might be another answer no one even wants to consider,” says the designer. “To me, that’s where invention is born.” STUDIOPAOLOFERRARI.COM

Originally published in our Best New Homes & Condos 2019 issue as “The Secret World of Paolo Ferrari”.

Advertisement
Advertisement

The designer walks us through the creative process behind Joue

Growing up, Canadian designer Mary Ratcliffe spent a lot of time in her dad’s workshop, which ultimately drove her interest in making things by hand. “Ever since I was a little kid, I’ve wanted to bring the creations in my mind to reality,” says Ratcliffe. “I think it’s something that I always inherently wanted to do. As soon as I had the opportunity, I took it.

Advertisement

Newsletter

Your Weekly Dose of Modern Design

Sign up for the Designlines weekly newsletter to keep up with the latest design news, trends and inspiring projects from across Toronto. Join our community and never miss a beat!

Please fill out your email address.

The Magazine

Get the Latest Issue

From a sprawling family home in Oakville to a coastal-inspired retreat north of the city, we present spaces created by architects and interior designers that redefine the contemporary.

Designlines 2024 Issue