Icon - Arrow LeftAn icon we use to indicate a rightwards action. Icon - Arrow RightAn icon we use to indicate a leftwards action. Icon - External LinkAn icon we use to indicate a button link is external. Icon - MessageThe icon we use to represent an email action. Icon - Down ChevronUsed to indicate a dropdown. Icon - CloseUsed to indicate a close action. Icon - Dropdown ArrowUsed to indicate a dropdown. Icon - Location PinUsed to showcase a location on a map. Icon - Zoom OutUsed to indicate a zoom out action on a map. Icon - Zoom InUsed to indicate a zoom in action on a map. Icon - SearchUsed to indicate a search action. Icon - EmailUsed to indicate an emai action. Icon - FacebookFacebooks brand mark for use in social sharing icons. flipboard Icon - InstagramInstagrams brand mark for use in social sharing icons. Icon - PinterestPinterests brand mark for use in social sharing icons. Icon - TwitterTwitters brand mark for use in social sharing icons. Icon - Check MarkA check mark for checkbox buttons.
You are reading

Outbuilding of the Week: Tiny Cabins in Dark and Light

Search

Outbuilding of the Week: Tiny Cabins in Dark and Light

October 2, 2015

Two tiny cabins in New Zealand offer an important reminder: a retreat need not be massive to offer a peaceful hideaway.  

Designed by firm principal Nat Cheshire of Aukland-based Cheshire Architects, the cabins are two projects for two clients: friends who pooled their money to buy a plot of land on a moody, remote estuary in northern New Zealand. They built their own shed cabin atop it, and took turns sharing it before deciding that two tiny, but very special, homes would better suit their needs. 

The result is a pair of structures full of dichotomies: They have small footprints on the land but stick out jarringly from the landscape. They’re basic plywood buildings, but with luxurious details inside. And one is black, the other light. 

Spotted on ArchDaily; interview info via New Zealand’s Home Magazine.  

Above: The cabins’ charred wood exteriors make them contrast with the landscape, but their lack of conventional “house” details–like a pathway from the road or a front door–makes them look like objects that might always have been there. Says architect Nat Cheshire, “In that big long grass it feels more like these were boats tied up at moorings in a slow-motion ocean.” Photograph by Jeremy Toth

Above: Each cabin has two openings: one serves as an entrance, the other as a window. But the entrance is not a door–instead, visitors step up onto a boulder to climb inside the large opening. “We hoped that in subverting the shorthand language of building, these little constructions might feel like something other than–and more than–houses.” His office spent days figuring out how to lock the openings without any visible hardware. Photograph by Jeremy Toth.

Above: The light cabin’s interior is plain builder’s plywood. Here, an occupant enjoys the water view from the open “window.” Photo by Jeremy Toth.

Ostentatious second homes were not in the budget for this project but weren’t wanted, anyway. The petite cabins were created in part as a reaction to overly large, little-used second homes. “Holiday homes have become this country’s decadence,” says Cheshire. “We wanted a different vision for New Zealand’s coastal future.”

The cabins are entirely off the grid, and each has a bathroom, kitchen, living room, lofted sleeping space, and outdoor shower. For ventilation, wood hatches open in the bathroom and sleeping lofts. 

Above: The entryway of each cabin looks inward toward the land. Photograph by Jeremy Toth.

The estuary-side plot was zoned for a single 1,500-square-meter (about 16,145-square-foot) house. Since this plan called for two separate dwellings–albeit at 29 square meters (312 square feet) each–the architect and clients had to argue their case for special permission to build. In total, the two cabins required just over eight sheets of plywood.

Above: The architect and clients had a unique vision for outfitting the cabin interiors–all liked the idea of adding luxurious details inside. Said the architect, “There’s a responsibility with objects of that scale that someone who is bold enough to commission it deserves to be delighted in every junction.” Furnishings in the light cabin include an Ercol sofa and AJ floor lamp by Arne Jacobsen. Photo by Jeremy Toth.

Above: Each kitchen has a small sink, refrigerator, gas stove, and dishwasher drawer. In the light cabin, the kitchen nook is lined in oiled “jarrah” eucalyptus wood. At left, the small closet bathroom. Photograph by Darryl Ward

Above: The black cabin’s view of the mangrove inlet. Rather than adding walls of glass to immerse the cabins’ occupants in the landscape, the architect actively avoided an indoor/outdoor experience. “The cabins are a retreat from the landscape rather than a saturation in it,” he says. Photograph by Jeremy Toth.

Above: The black cabin is lined in form ply–low-cost panels covered in polished black coating–which creates a deep, inky space. Says the owner: “At night, if there’s just a couple of candles going, the panels have a sheen that’s quite disconcerting; it’s like you’re sitting in a void, or outside.” Furnishings in the black cabin include a daybed by Donald Judd and an Eleanor Cooper twig mobile overhead. Photograph by Darryl Ward

Above: The black cabin’s kitchen has the same appliances as the light cabin but is lined in glamorous brass paneling. Photograph by Darryl Ward

Above: The dark cabin’s sleeping loft, with a skylight overhead for viewing stars. Photograph by Darryl Ward

Above L: Both cabins’ showers are outdoors, facing the water. R: The entrance opening of each cabin doubles in function as a small deck. Photograph by Darryl Ward

Above: Cheshire wanted the cabins to exist boldly in the landscape, to “invoke the kind of dislocation that might stop you in your tracks, and help you see anew.” Photograph by Darryl Ward

More dream cabins await: 

(Visited 545 times, 1 visits today)
You need to login or register to view and manage your bookmarks.

Have a Question or Comment About This Post?

Join the conversation

v5.0