Quadrant Architects is an OAA-licensed custom home architect and new construction architect in Toronto, licensed by the Ontario Association of Architects (OAA) with full professional liability insurance. We design custom homes, infill houses, and replacement homes under Toronto Zoning Bylaw 569-2013 and the Ontario Building Code. Every project starts with a property-specific zoning review that establishes what is actually buildable before any design fees are committed.
In Toronto, zoning bylaws and angular plane restrictions define the buildable envelope before design begins. Getting these right from the start determines whether your project moves efficiently through the City of Toronto Building Division or stalls in examiner review.
Hiring a custom home architect in Toronto means more than getting drawings. It means having someone who understands how the design decisions you make at the concept stage interact with zoning bylaws, building code requirements, and permit review, before any money is committed to construction.
Every custom home project starts with a property-specific zoning review. In Toronto, this means analyzing the RD (Residential Detached) zone designation, applicable zoning bylaw conditions, lot coverage maximums, height limits, angular plane restrictions, setback requirements, and any site-specific overlays like heritage or ravine designations. On a recent replacement home project in North York, the angular plane restriction from the rear property line, not the permitted height or lot coverage, was the constraint that defined the entire massing of the house. Identifying this before concept design began saved significant redesign time and budget.
Concept design for a custom home explores multiple layout options before committing to one direction. We develop schemes that respond to the site conditions, sun orientation, view corridors, privacy from neighbours, indoor-outdoor connection, while staying within the buildable envelope defined by zoning. For a recent two-storey custom home in Markham, the client’s requirement for a double-height entry and open staircase was the organizing idea around which every other space was arranged, including the placement of the garage to maximize rear yard connection.
A complete building permit submission for a custom home in Toronto includes architectural drawings, structural engineering, and depending on the scope, mechanical, energy modelling, and geotechnical reports. We prepare the full architectural package and coordinate the required consultants, so the submission is complete on first review rather than triggering rounds of examiner deficiency requests. Incomplete submissions are the most common cause of permit delays on residential projects.
New custom homes fall under Part 9 of the Ontario Building Code. We design to Part 9 compliance from the first concept sketch, not as a layer applied after the design is already resolved.
Permit drawings get the permit. Construction documents get an accurate tender and a build that reflects the design intent. We remain available during construction for RFIs and site observations.
Not every residential project needs a custom home architect. Being clear about this upfront saves everyone time:
For projects that genuinely call for custom residential design, infill homes, replacement homes on established lots, architecturally distinctive new builds, or homes that need to maximize a challenging site, the investment in a qualified architect pays for itself in avoided mistakes, better contractor pricing from clear drawings, and a result that performs as intended.
The issues we see most often on projects that run into difficulty:
We design custom homes in Toronto and across the GTA. Each municipality operates under its own zoning bylaw and permit process. We confirm the applicable requirements for your specific property and municipality before any design fees are committed.
In Toronto and many GTA municipalities, new custom homes can be designed from the outset to include additional dwelling units, a legal basement apartment, a garden suite in the backyard, or in Toronto, up to four units as-of-right under current zoning. Planning these at the design stage rather than adding them later produces better layouts, proper fire separation, correct servicing, and a permit package that covers the full scope from the start.
A custom home designed with a basement rental suite from the beginning has dedicated entrances, correctly sized egress windows, separate mechanical runs, and proper sound separation between floors, all of which are far more difficult and expensive to retrofit after construction.
The first step on any custom home project is confirming what your specific lot can support, zoning, buildable envelope, permit process, and realistic timeline. We do this before any design fees are committed so you’re making decisions based on your actual property, not general assumptions.
Contact Quadrant Architects to discuss your lot and project goals.
Every member of our team has advanced education in architecture and design

M.Arch Architect, OAA
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal

M.Arch.BCIN
Principal