A Contemporary Reinterpretation of a Treehouse

Lake Cottage blurs the limits between the inside and the outside

by Rossana Vinci
10
10 Love 3088 Visits

Canadian architecture office UUfie has designed a two-storey cottage in Bolsover, Ontario as a reinterpretation of living in a tree house where nature acts as an integral part in the act of inhabitation.

Lake Cottage’s interior and exterior spaces are connected fluidly: with daring lines and a chic design that doesn’t stop it blending in with the lush natural surroundings of Kawartha Lake.

In a forest of birch and spruce trees along the Kawartha Lakes, Lake cottage is designed as a two storey, multi-uses space for a large family. The structure composed of a 7m high A-frame pitch roof covered in black steel and charred cedar siding.

A deep cut in the building volume creates a cantilever overhang for a protected outdoor terrace with mirrors to further give the illusion of the building containing the forest inside.

This mixture of feeling between nature and building continue into the interior: the main living space is design as a self-contained interior volume, while the peripheral rooms are treated as part of the building site.

Fourteen openings into this grand living space reveal both inhabited spaces, skies and trees, equally treated and further articulated with edges finishes of interior panel kept raw to show the inherit nature of materials used. 

 This abstract nature of the interior spaces allows imagination to flow, and those spaces that could be identified as a domestic interior can suddenly become play spaces.

 A solid timber staircase leads to a loft which has the feeling of ascending into tree canopies as sunlight softy falls on wall covered in fish-scaled shingle stained in light blue. 

Using local materials and traditional construction methods, the cottage incorporated sustainable principles.

The black wood cladding of exterior is a technique of charring cedar that acts as a natural agent against termite and fire.

Thick walls and roof provide high insulation value, a central wood hearth provides heat and deep recessed windows and skylights provide natural ventilation and lighting.

 

 

Photo Courtesy of © Naho Kubota 

 

 

Comments
    comment
    user
    Author
    References
    Lake Cottage 63

    Lake Cottage

    Kawartha Lakes / Canada / 2013