Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

This holiday cabin in Sweden by architect Mikael Bergquist is clad with untreated timber that will fade to grey as time passes (+ slideshow).

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

Surrounded by woodland, the house is located near the western seafront and provides a retreat for a family that lives in England.

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

The building has a gabled roof and overhanging eaves, which reference the traditional local architecture.

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

“The traditional Swedish farm house is deeply rooted, almost as an icon,” Bergquist told Dezeen. ”I wanted to combine this typology with a modern way of living, in close contact with nature.”

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

A large living and dining room is located at one end of the house and has sliding glass walls that open it out to a surrounding deck.

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

See more Swedish houses here, including one with a bare wooden interior.

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

Floor plan – click above for larger image

Photography is by Mikael Olsson.

Summer House by Mikael Bergquist

Section – click above for larger image

Project details:

Name: Summer House M
Location: Bohuslän, The West Coast, Sweden
Year of completion: 2012
Architect: M.B.A. Mikael Bergquist
Landscape: Per Axelsson

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by Mikael Bergquist
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Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Italian architect Enrico Scaramellini squeezed this narrow holiday house into the passageway between two farm buildings in the Alpine countryside of northern Italy.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

The house is named Wardrobe in the Landscape, in reference to the wooden shutters that swing open and closed across the narrow, closet-like facade.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Wooden panels are painted grey on the exterior, but left to their natural colours on the interior walls, floors and ceilings.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

The building widens at the back, creating space for a single room.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Other retreats we’ve featured include an arrow-shaped house in Japan and a house on a sled in New Zealand.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

See more stories about holiday homes »

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Photography is by Marcello Mariana.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Here’s a project description from Enrico Scaramellini:


The project is based on two specific conditions: – on one side the client’s needs, looking for a small and intimate space; – on the other a small, special and precious place. The alpine landscape dominates the place: it becomes evident the condition of a privileged and unique space.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

The concept of size guides the project. Great is the land, the landscape: small is the place, the space. There is a mutual relationship that inspires the design process. What is the role of the “room” in relation to the landscape? How the landscape reflects, “adopts” the room? The point of view changes in a frenzied search for balance.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

A micro retreat for weekends, a place for contemplation, a clearing house from a daily hectic urban condition. A small wooden box fits between two existing buildings. Inside, the wood shows its nature in warm tones; outside, the surface treatment with silver-gray paints echoes the colors of the centenarian woods of rural buildings.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Site plan

The wooden panels, assembled with different development of the vein (horizontal – vertical), react to sunlight returning different geometric compositions.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Ground floor plan

Outside, almost in a mimetic condition, the new wooden facade seems to hide itself, in the shadows of the landscape, and then to confirm, with sunlight, its presence, dazzling, throwing a visible signal at a long distance.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

First floor plan

Inside, the space becomes a privileged place overlooking the landscape. Almost an abstraction, an estrangement that allows to emphasize the privileged status of the “spectator”. A second level of thinking regards the stability of the building’s image in the landscape: spaces lived for short periods consolidate their status of “closed” places.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Section

The light that reflects differently on the wooden panels changes the appearance in colors and tones, the uninhabited façade lives of its own life. Finally, the project underlines yet another ambiguity: as a wooden container, as furniture and furnishing, it is “a wardrobe in the landscape”.

Wardrobe in the Landscape by Enrico Scaramellini

Elevation – click for larger image

The project operates in small size, uses simple devices to find a contemporary language within strongly characterized environmental contexts.

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by Enrico Scaramellini
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Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Shimmering aluminium panels are ridged like the top surfaces of bricks on the exterior of this country house in upstate New York by architects Grzywinski + Pons (+ slideshow).

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Ipe wood screens and painted yellow doors contrast with the silvery cladding, which subtly reflects the colours of the surrounding woodland.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

The wooden screens fasten across glass doors and windows to secure the two-storey residence when it is unoccupied.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

The house was designed as a weekend retreat and is accompanied by a smaller building that can be privately rented or used as a family guesthouse.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Only the master bedroom is located on the top floor of the house and opens out onto a large balcony.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Other American houses on Dezeen include a writer’s retreat elsewhere in New York and a 4.5 metre-wide house in Los Angeles.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

See more stories about holiday homes »

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Photography is by Floto + Warner.

Here’s some text from Grzywinski + Pons:


Dutchess House No. 1

When Grzywinski + Pons was commissioned to design this house we were excited by a brief and directive from the client that was very specific programmatically and where budget had primacy but open to whatever form that might manifest from our process in addressing their requests.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

The house was conceived as country home initially used as a complement to and reprieve from their apartment in the city that could ultimately evolve into a primary residence. They wanted a detached cottage or guest house that could accommodate their visiting elderly parents for extended stays from the west coast and be available to rent out on a nightly basis at their discretion to help defray costs.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Another request was to create a place that felt very open to it’s beautiful surroundings yet could be battened down and secured during any extended periods when it was unoccupied. Furthermore, the client – when anticipating stays in the house alone – requested we create a master bedroom suite that allowed unfettered access to the outdoors (both physically and visually) from a safe “perch” when the ground floor was secured for the night.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

We paid special attention to sightlines, exposures, seasonal variations in the quality and direction of light and the flow and integration of interior and exterior spaces.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

We also were focused on making the home very sustainable and energy efficient – while this informed the design of the home in a significant way we didn’t want the house and cottage to wear their green credentials on their sleeve as an aesthetic.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

The house was built with ICFs, strategically glazed with low-e assemblies and clad in high albedo mill finish aluminum. We designed deep eaves into the largest expanses of glass based on our solar studies.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

The home and cottage ended up being so well insulated that we needed to specify an EVR unit for fresh air exchange. An on demand hot water system precludes any wasted energy on water heaters when the home is unoccupied and also heats the home through a hydronic radiant slab. Low flow fixtures, dual flush toilets, LED lighting, high efficiency appliances and sustainably grown lumber were all specified and employed.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

We wanted to make sure that the house felt very warm and happy – a truly convivial environment – while unabashedly modern and durable. The natural environment is the star of the show and each room or interior space is predicated on celebrating that. Even the exterior cladding, specified for performance – matte aluminum and ipe – was designed to amplify the progression of hues both throughout the day and throughout the seasons.

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Architects: Grzywinski+Pons
Project completed: 2012
Location: Millerton, NY
Design Team: Matthew Grzywinski, Amador Pons

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Ground floor detail plan 1 – click above for larger image

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

Ground floor detail plan 2 – click above for larger image

Dutchess House No. 1 by Grzywinski + Pons

First floor detail plan – click above for larger image

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by Grzywinski + Pons
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ISM house by International Royal Architecture

Tokyo studio International Royal Architecture designed this seaside house with the “form of a pure white arrow”.

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

The exterior of ISM house is completely wrapped in waterproof fiberglass-reinforced polymer.

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

Large double doors in both sides open a tunnel through the middle of the building with rooms either side screened by sliding glass doors.

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

A mezzanine bridges the gap and creates an airy upper level under the roof, uninterrupted by columns.

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

Glazing under the eaves bounces daylight around the upper level and spills light onto the porch and yard on each side at night.

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

See more stories about Japanese houses on Dezeen »

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

See more holiday homes on Dezeen »

ISM house by International Royal Architecture

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Royal Architecture
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Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

This holiday home by Swiss architects Hurst Song Architekten is partly embedded in the steep slopes of the Swiss Alps (+ slideshow).

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Located in Lumbrein in the Swiss canton of Graubünden, the house is vertically clad in black-stained timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The roof is made from copper and will eventually discolour to blend in with the dark timber.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof has been positioned perpendicular to the hill, as is customary for local buildings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

A concrete frame has been inserted around the entrance at the lower corner of the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The underground parking area also provides a separate internal entrance to the house.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors make use of concrete and spruce, with darker materials on the lower levels and lighter materials throughout the upper floors.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The kitchen and living room have spruce walls and concrete floors, and are divided by a central concrete wall.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The bedrooms are finished in spruce and some have beds that fold out from the walls.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The project was commended in the AR House 2012 prize this year.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Another house in the Swiss Alps we’ve featured on Dezeen is a concrete extension to a stone house and barn.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

See all our stories about Switzerland »

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Here’s some more text from the architects:


The building is located at the periphery of the village and ascribed to the landscape of a sloping field. The new road curves below the parcel which necessitates a steep berm where a small incision is made to allow access to the garage and provide entry to the house through the basement.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The gabled roof is oriented perpendicular to the slope following local custom.The building volume is rotated to face the street and to optimize the stunning views.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The resulting crystalline geometry emphasizes a dynamic relationship to the landscape. This reading is enhanced by the absence of roof eaves.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The sheathing, composed of verticle wooden planks, is treated with a weatherproof dark stain which relates to the materialtiy of the aged barns in the region.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The standing-seam copper roof will age in a short time to the same hue as the facade.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

The interiors are primarily composed out of concrete and spruce. The surfaces interlock and graduate in proportion from the cellar to the attic from heavy to light.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

In the living room a rugged concrete floor matches the concrete walls and in the bedrooms the wood floors are made from the same material as the timber walls and ceilings.

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkristal
Single Family House
Lumbrein, GR 2009-2010
Switzerland
Minergie-P (Passive House Standard)

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Architektur: Hurst Song Architekten, Zürich
Ingenieur: Clemens Arpagaus, Vella

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Haustechnik: BSP-Energie, Zürich
Bauphysik: Raumanzug, Zürich

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Holzkonstruktion: Alig & Co, Vrin
Fenster und Türen: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Schreinerarbeiten: Alig & Co, Vrin
Küche: Alig & Co, Vrin

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

Sanitärapparate: Catalano
Küchenapparate: V-Zug
Beschläge: D-Line

Holzkristal by Hurst Song Architekten

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Hurst Song Architekten
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House on the Marsh by A1Architects

A dormer window provides a first-floor observatory at this gabled lodge in the Czech Republic by A1 Architects of Prague.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Located in the woodland of a mountainous region in the north-west of the country, House on the Marsh provides a family retreat where residents can ski on the slopes during winter or relax in the sun for the summer.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Timber lines the walls, floors and ceiling of each room, including a first floor gallery that accommodates a hammock and small study space.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

The balconies of the gallery overlook a combined living room, dining room and kitchen on the ground floor with a traditional tiled stove at its centre.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

The timber-clad exterior of the house is painted dark green and the roof is steeply gabled to match the vernacular style of the regional architecture.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

A front veranda offers a sheltered outdoor space, while another at the back provides storage for firewood.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

We recently rounded up all of the holiday homes we’ve featured on Dezeen – see them all here.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Photography is by David Maštálka.

Here’s some text from A1Architects:


House on the Marsh
every house deserves its small extra space…

House on the Marsh is a private lodge located in the mountainous district of Jizerske hory in northern Bohemia. It is a family retreat hidden in marsh and forests, which provides great space to gather for all three family generations.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

The house

The architecture of the house had to follow strict building regulations including the house geometry or specific colors or materials which were dictated by the local authorities, to reach traditional vernacular architecture.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Simple and traditional form of the house with tall gabled roof is repeated in an unique long dormer window which serves as a special extra space with splendid view of the valley. Dark green vertical cladding protects the supporting timber structure of the house.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

In winter one might enter the lodge under the prolonged eaves that roofs southern glazed veranda, which perfectly serves also for sunbathing or preparation of all ski equipment. The sliding glass could be adjusted according to the weather conditions. The northern veranda is a storage for firewood.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Site plan – click above for larger image

The interior

The traditional green tile stove is anchored to the centre of the ground floor living space. This robust stove can perfectly heat up the whole lodge during the winter, but works also naturally as an inner magnet of the room, cause it is a warm bench, divan or a cooker. The living room is divided by the central stove into several parts and small corners, there is a kitchen, dining table, seating niche and inside firewood storage under the stairs. The living room is southern oriented and opens towards sunny veranda. Its space continues vertically above the dining table up to the first floor living gallery. There are 3 bedrooms in the house, each with its own bathroom. Two of them are upstairs and the main bedroom for the oldest generation of skiers is situated in the ground floor next to the living room.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The lookout dormer aka “lolling space”

The attic gallery is a place where to just lounge about, after the whole day of cross-country skiing, while enjoying the advantage of wonderful view from the hammock or from the long dormer window which we started to call “the lolling space”. It is an extra space, an independent typological kind with the only purpuse – to loll. We believe that every house deserves its own extra space.

House on the Marsh by A1Architects

First floor plan – click above for larger image

Client: Private
Authors: A1Architects – Lenka Křemenová, David Maštálka
Interior Cooperation: Jakub Šulc
Construction: Reno S.R.O.
Joinery: Radek Opalecký
Photography: A1Architects – David Maštálka
Area: 170 M2
Realization: 2011-12
Study Project: 2010

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by A1Architects
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Dezeen archive: holiday homes

Holiday Homes

Dezeen archive: for those wishing to escape a wet summer, here’s a round-up of all the holiday houses featured on Dezeen to help you imagine the perfect retreat. See all the stories »

See all our archive stories »

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Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Imagine waking up in a glass bedroom by the waterside on a remote Finnish island. 

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Helsinki architect Ville Hara and designer Linda Bergroth of Hel Yes! launched their combined greenhouse and shed kit for the gardening market in 2010 and has Bergroth customised the prototype to create her own summer house, adding a wooden floor, solar panels for lighting and steps made of reclaimed bricks.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

She can enjoy the open views across the lake while all the clutter is hidden in the storage compartment at the back.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

The modular parts can be bought in 4 different variations through Kekkilä Garden in Finland and Hasselfors Garden in other Scandinavian countries.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

The Finnish pine and toughened safety glass components can be self-assembled on site.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

See more work from the designers at Hel Yes! here. As for greenhouses, we recently published one made completely out of lego bricks – see our earlier story.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Photography is by Arsi Ikäheimonen

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Here’s some more text from the designers:


Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth for Kekkilä Garden

Garden Shed is designed by architect Ville Hara and designer Linda Bergroth for Kekkilä Garden’s Home & Garden collection. It is a unique prefabricated garden shed that combines a green house with storage space and comes in ready made elements that can be assembled by simply using a screwdriver. The Garden Shed is made from Finnish pine and safety glass and equipped with automatic openers to control the temperature inside.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

It is designed to fit in the Scandinavian landscape and has a traditional gabled roof – typical in the area because of the weather conditions. The product comes in natural wood and can be painted according to taste and the surrounding area. The wall elements function as support for folding shelves: glass shelves for the greenhouse that allows the sun reach all the plants and wooden shelves in two sizes for storage use.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

At the end of the season, when garden furniture and big tools have to be taken indoors- the shelves can be folded away to maximize floor space.The double doors in the storage part were inspired by the old multilayered sewing/tool boxes that allows you to see the whole content at one simple gesture. The big doors allow natural light to come in and allows you to easily see and reach everything.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

The product was launched in 2010 and was awarded with the Garden Product of the Year prize. It is available through Kekkilä Garden in Finland and by Hasselfors Garden in other Scandinavian countries.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

The Green shed shown in the pictures is designer Linda Bergroth’s summer cottage. The designer had one of the early prototypes built to her summer cottage -a distant island in eastern Finland. The Garden shed in used as an extra bedroom during the summer months. It is customized by adding a wooden floor in the greenhouse part and solar panels to enable lighting. Stairs and pavings are made from local recycled bricks.

Garden Shed by Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth

Designers: Ville Hara and Linda Bergroth
Client: Kekkilä Garden (Finland) Hasselfors Garden (other Scandinavian countries)


See also:

.

Naust paa Aure by
TYIN tegnestue
Holiday Cabana by
Damith Premathilake
Hölick Sea Resort by Edlund, Palmer + Ingman

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects photographed by Edmund Sumner

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Here are some photographs by Edmund Sumner of the completed Balancing Barn holiday home in Suffolk, UK, by MVRDV and Mole Architects, including a swing under the 15 metre cantilever.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

The project is the first of five in Alain de Botton’s Living Architecture project and available for rent from 22 October.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

The building is clad in reflective panels and the interior was created by Dutch designers Studio Makkink & Bey.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

More about the project here.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Photographs are by Edmund Sumner.

The information below is from MVRDV:


Balancing Barn, a cantilevered holiday home near the village of Thorington in Suffolk, England, was completed last Tuesday. The Barn is 30 meters long, with a 15 meters cantilever over a slope, plunging the house headlong into nature. Living Architecture, an organization devoted to the experience of modern architecture, commissioned MVRDV in 2008. Mole Architects from Cambridge were executive architects and Studio Makkink & Bey from Amsterdam collaborated on the interior. The Barn is now available for holiday rentals.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Balancing Barn is situated on a beautiful site by a small lake in the English countryside near Thorington in Suffolk. The Barn responds through its architecture and engineering to the site condition and natural setting. The traditional barn shape and reflective metal sheeting take their references from the local building vernacular. In this sense the Balancing Barn aims to live up to its educational goal in re-evaluating the countryside and making modern architecture accessible. Additionally, it is both a restful and exciting holiday home. Furnished to a high standard of comfort and elegance, set in a quintessentially English landscape, it engages its temporary inhabitants in an experience.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Approaching along the 300 meter driveway, Balancing Barn looks like a small, two-person house. It is only when visitors reach the end of the track that they suddenly experience the full length of the volume and the cantilever. The Barn is 30 meters long, with a 15 meters cantilever over a slope, plunging the house headlong into nature. The reason for this spectacular setting is the linear experience of nature. As the site slopes, and the landscape with it, the visitor experiences nature first at ground level and ultimately at tree height. The linear structure provides the stage for a changing outdoor experience.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

At the midpoint the Barn starts to cantilever over the descending slope, a balancing act made possible by the rigid structure of the building, resulting in 50% of the barn being in free space. The structure balances on a central concrete core, with the section that sits on the ground constructed from heavier materials than the cantilevered section. The long sides of the structure are well concealed by trees, offering privacy inside and around the Barn.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

The exterior is covered in reflective metal sheeting, which, like the pitched roof, takes its references from the local building vernacular and reflects the surrounding nature and changing seasons.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

On entering the Barn, one steps into a kitchen and a large dining room. A series of four double bedrooms follows, each with separate bathroom and toilet. In the very centre of the barn the bedroom sequence is interrupted by a hidden staircase providing access to the garden beneath. In the far, cantilevered end of the barn, there is a large living space with windows in three of its walls, floor and ceiling.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

The addition of a fireplace makes it possible to experience all four elements on a rainy day. Full height sliding windows and roof lights throughout the house ensure continuous views of, access to and connectivity with nature.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

The interior is based on two main objectives:

  • The house is an archetypical two-person home, expanded in shape and content so that it can equally comfortably accommodate eight. Two will not feel lost in the space, and a group of eight will not feel too cramped.
  • A neutral, timeless timber is the backdrop for the interior, in which Studio Makkink & Bey have created a range of furnishings that reflect the design concept of the Barn.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

The rooms are themed. Partly pixilated and enlarged cloud studies by John Constable and country scenes by Thomas Gainsborough are used as connecting elements between the past and contemporary Britain, as carpets, wall papers and mounted textile wall-elements.

Balancing Barn by MVRDV and Mole Architects

Click above for larger image

The crockery is made up of a set of English classics for two, and a modern series for a further six guests, making an endless series of combinations possible and adding the character of a private residence to the home.

Click above for larger image

The Barn is highly insulated, ventilated by a heat recovery system, warmed by a ground source heat pump, resulting in a high energy efficient building.


See also:

.

More about
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Living Architecture

Trufa by Anton García-Abril

Photographer Roland Halbe has sent us his photographs of a holiday home in Spain by Anton García-Abril of Ensamble Studio, cast in the earth and hollowed out by a cow. (more…)