Lloyoll Makes Prefabs Primed for The Wilderness

The Canadian company specializes in customizable modular homes for rustic locales, including their newest project—a 1,192-square-foot vacation home on Prince Edward Island.

Lloyoll Makes Prefabs Primed for The Wilderness

The Canadian company specializes in customizable modular homes for rustic locales, including their newest project—a 1,192-square-foot vacation home on Prince Edward Island.

Welcome to Prefab Profiles, an ongoing series of interviews with people transforming how we build houses. From prefab tiny houses and modular cabin kits to entire homes ready to ship, their projects represent some of the best ideas in the industry. Do you know a prefab brand that should be on our radar? Get in touch! 

Since founding Lloyoll in 2003, Jonathan Loy has led the company in its evolution from traditional timber framing construction to modular design and build purveyor. It’s a natural progression that mirrors Loy’s own; After studying business, he spent his subsequent knock-around years as a mentee in woodworking, log building, timber framing, and even large scale commercial projects, before launching Lloyoll.  

Today, the company creates customizable loft-style prefabs inspired by (and designed to withstand) the typically rugged outdoor environments their clients opt for. They currently offer four core models—the BackCountry, Bungalow, High Cuboid, and Lodge—that are distinguished by floor plan, layout, and ceiling height. From there, customers can choose from three rustic material palettes: Sitka, Skáli, and Salti. The team offers custom options, too. 

Read on to learn why Loy says the company’s latest project is their most exciting one yet.  

Skáli North is a remote retreat situated along the coast of Prince Edward Island. The 1,192-square-foot vacation home belongs to a journalist and his family, who visit throughout each of the area’s four distinct seasons.

Skáli North is a remote retreat situated along the coast of Prince Edward Island. The 1,192-square-foot, four-bedroom vacation home belongs to a journalist and his family.

Photo by Julian Parkinson

Can you share a little about the most exciting project you've realized to date?

In 21 years of business, collaborating with architects from the East Coast to the West, the project closest to me is Skáli North. Pulling this name from ancient Norse was no accident. The project began when I was approached by a journalist whose work I had always admired. Together we created this remote coastal retreat. 

Armoring the home in timeless weathering steel was an easy call as it faces the fury of the Atlantic, perched along the northeast coast of Prince Edward Island with no protection between the cliffs and Iceland. Cladding the interior with rich vertical grain Douglas Fir paneling offers a sense of inviting warmth after returning from a day of exploring along the cliffs or waiting out a seasonal storm. 

We have been careful to craft homes that are easy to expand seamlessly with no renovation to the principal home necessary. Since the first High Cuboid delivery, we have shipped a Guest House with a game room, coffee station, and independent services that give extended family privacy but still brings all of the family members together for meals in the central lodge. We developed the landscaping with the same intent, offering pathways to the site's attractions that are private while also creating space to gather. The Garden Studio is mostly for toys but is often used as a break-out work space or shop, depending on need. 

Skáli North consists of four modules spread out across four deliveries: the High Cuboid, MudPod Vestibule, Grand Shed/Studio, and the Guest Wing, which is connected by an open-air hallway.

Skáli North consists of four modules spread out across four deliveries: the High Cuboid, MudPod Vestibule, Grand Shed/Studio, and the Guest Wing, which is connected by an open-air hallway. 

Photo by Julian Parkinson

What qualities make your prefab stand apart from the rest?

Our customers are initially attracted to the lifestyle represented by our brand, which is manifested in our architecture, quality, and details. 

Embracing the far reaches and remote destinations our adventuring clientele envision, we designed and built our own delivery system from concept. For example, our modular specific trailer expands, shrinks, lifts, steers and even disassembles to interact (with the least impact) with the natural environment. We offer the highest ceilings in a single, transportable module in the industry.

I find our more experienced customers are also really attracted to the simplicity and openness of our process, from transparent costing to the curated design experience. If you have ever designed and built your own home as a customer, you begin to understand the amount of energy and time that can be dedicated to design theories that don’t necessarily move the needle on the project for the client in a meaningful way. There is a balance somewhere between pure creation and trusting a brand's process to fill in the blanks. And long after the designers and photographers have left—does it all work for you in your day-to-day life? Does it last? Behind the scenes we focus on the systems as we are the warranty provider and want the best experience for everyone.

In addition to the modules, Skáli North includes a range of custom work crafted by Lloyoll, including a hidden TV, built-in bunk beds, and a motorized standing work desk.

Lloyoll offers three aesthetic styles—Salti, Stika, and Skáli—that differ in their material approaches to rustic luxury. Skáli, pictured above, leverages weathering steel cladding for a bold, durable design.

Photo by Julian Parkinson

See the full story on Dwell.com: Lloyoll Makes Prefabs Primed for The Wilderness
Related stories: