Bicycle Treehouse Elevator

Après avoir construit sa maison au sommet d’un arbre d’une dizaine de mètres, Ethan Schlussler construit un vélo ascenseur pour y accéder. Conçu pour monter et descendre le long d’une chaine, le vélo ascenseur s’actionne dès lors que l’on pédale. Une formidable installation à découvrir en images et en vidéo dans l’article.

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Book: Tree Houses

Le più belle case sull’albero le trovate in questo libro edito da Taschen.

Book: Tree Houses

Big Tree House

Après 14 années de construction, Horace Burgess a réussi à réaliser son rêve de construire une maison gigantesque dans les arbres. Dans le même esprit que Tree House, ce projet mesure environ 30 mètres de haut. Des visuels impressionnants dans la suite sur ce projet complexe.



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Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

This trapezium-shaped box sitting on four slanting legs is a garden playhouse by Slovenian firm Ravnikar Potokar.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

The wooden structure is designed to be self-supporting so that it can be erected among trees without leaning on them for support.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

There is a full-height plexiglass window at one end of the tree house and tiny apertures with shutters on the sides.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Two retractable benches fold out of the walls, with a fixed bench at the back of the small inside space.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Photographs are by Andraž Kavčič, Robert Potokar, Robert Marčun.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

More tree houses on Dezeen »

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Tree House, Slovenia

This freestanding house-by-a-tree is a multipurpose wooden play structure, standing on its own construction. It can be erected close to trees that are unable to support additional weight.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

This tree house, conceived with contemporary design principles, is not modelled on any of the classic tree house forms that take their inspiration from either real houses or garden sheds.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Instead, children are offered a different understanding of shapes, new spatial experiences and new forms of play.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

The house is made of spruce plywood, protected on the exterior by a colourless nano-varnish. The roof is covered in a roofing cardboard that shields against most kinds of unfavourable weather conditions.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Furnishings are minimal, constructed from dowel pins that we made with kids one Sunday afternoon.

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Designer: Robert Potokar
Co-designer: Janez Brežnik
Location: Trnovo, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Construction: Tesarstvo Kregar

Tree House by Ravnikar Potokar

Click for larger image

Project: February 2008
Completion: first – June 2008, second -July 2009, third – October 2010
Building area: 3.5 m²


See also:

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Outlandia by
Malcolm Fraser Architects
Treehouse by
Nicko Björn Elliott
Takasugi-an by
Terunobu Fujimori

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

Edinburgh studio Malcolm Fraser Architects have completed this wooden treehouse housing an artists’ studio in Glen Nevis, Scotland.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

The wood-panelled structure sits atop a pillar and is reached via a bridge.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

A meandering wooden walkway leading out from the hut nestles into the sloping landscape.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

Called Outlandia, the project was commissioned by art and architecture collective London Fieldworks.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

The structure is made partly of trees that were cut down to clear the site.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

See also:

Spontaneous City in the Tree of Heaven by London Fieldworks
Tree Hotel by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

More architecture on Dezeen »

Here’s some more information from London Fieldworks and the architects:


Edinburgh studio Malcol, Fraser Architects have completed a treehouse in Glen Nevis, Scotland,

Outlandia is an off-grid treehouse artist studio and fieldstation in Glen Nevis, Lochaber, Scotland. A flexible meeting space in the forest for creative collaboration and research. Imagined by artists Bruce Gilchrist and Jo Joelson (London Fieldworks) and designed by Malcolm Fraser Architects, Outlandia is inspired by childhood dens, wildlife hides and bothies, by forest outlaws and Japanese poetry platforms.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

It is located in a copse of Norwegian Spruce and Larch on Forestry Commission land, at the foot of Ben Nevis in the Scottish Highlands. “Construction was part-joinery, part-forestry and part-mountain rescue, with a local contractor who nicely combined all three, and an unusual set of Risk Assessments”.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

Outlandia is an artist-led project, built in 2010 to foster links between creativity and the environment; a multi-purpose platform for the use of local and invited artists. London Fieldworks were invited by the Highland Council to make a proposal to celebrate the Year of Highland Culture that would create a lasting contemporary art legacy for the Fort William area. Outlandia is the outcome, a platform from which to consider creative responses to the environment. The proposal was inspired by London Fieldworks’ previous experience working in Lochaber: whilst there is an abundance of artistic talent and creativity in the Highlands there are few dedicated contemporary arts facilities in Fort William or in the surrounding area.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

The Outlandia project is sensitive to the shifting ecology between human population, industry and landscape. The site is on Forestry Commission land overlooking the southwest facing side of the glen with its ancient, native trees. This context makes explicit the dichotomy within a landscape under pressure to function as an area of outstanding natural beauty (the area has been branded Outdoor Capital of the UK) as well as a resource for society’s raw materials – a schism common to many rural communities. During its time of service, Outlandia will provide a multi-purpose platform for the use of diverse community groups as well as selected artists and researchers. Outlandia is in line with The Scottish Forestry Strategy that aims to create opportunities for more people to enjoy trees, woods and forests in Scotland, and to help communities benefit from woods and forests.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

OUTLANDIA: PROJECT DESCRIPTION
By Malcolm Fraser

The Project Brief was nice and loose: an artists’ fieldstation in Glen Nevis, to allow and encourage creative interaction between artists and the land, its history and people.

The site was even looser: somewhere in Glen Nevis. Where, exactly, grew out of a complex negotiation with partners, landowners and the local authorities, which brought to the surface some interesting tensions – a portion of the climbing fraternity, for instance, believes that hills should be for serious craggies only, and that artists should be kept away. On the ground, the choice of site grew out of long crawls through wet undergrowth and up wooded slopes, in clouds of midges and carpets of pine needles, in search of natural and human drama.

Outlandia by Malcolm Fraser Architects

The site chosen is full of it. Sitting half-way up the opposite side of the Glen to Ben Nevis, a visitor approaches Outlandia through the path we cut through the dense woods behind, descending out the musty dark of the trees into a big view which, from dark-to-light and framed by old, tall larches, opens-up across the Glen to the shoulder of the Ben. The view of great nature dazzles, but we soon start to see the multiplicity of human interaction with it: the routes threading across the view, from the main road and West Highland Way along the foot of the Glen to the tourist route up the Ben, with its strings of tiny bobbling hats working their way up the hill; the car parks, caravan parks and visitor centre, places of the modern tourist trade; the old mills and older burial mounds, traces of more ancient useage; and the great industrial aluminium smelter across the Glen and the hydro that powers it.

Nothing could be further from the idea of the Highlands as “unspoilt wilderness”. We have long been part of this landscape, and it seems unlikely that any artists making work for, from or aound Outlandia would fail to enjoy and illuminate the tensions around nature, industry, tourism and heritage.

The building itself sits out from a 45 degree slope: a treehouse, part-built out the trees cut down to form the site, entered across a bridge from the slope behind; a simple box, leaning-out into the view with big windows opening-up to it. Part of the building of it was a low-impact, eco-friendly use of material recovered from the site; part the opposite, high-impact and hairy landings of concrete, for the foundations, from a helicopter. Construction was part-joinery, part-forestry and part-mountain rescue, with a local contractor who nicely combined all three, and an unusual set of Risk Assessments.

London Fieldworks commissioned Outlandia and are curating the work in and around it.


See also:

.

Spontaneous City by
London Fieldworks
Tree Hotel by
Tham & Videgård Arkitekter
Takasugi-an by
Terunobu Fujimori

Takasugi-an by Terunobu Fujimori

takasugi-an-by-terunobu-fujimori-0.jpg

Following yesterday’s Charcoal House story, here’s another of Terunobu Fujimori’s projects photographed by Edmund Sumner: this time Takasugi-an, a tea house in Chino, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. (more…)