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The term cabin connotes numerous associations: small, remote,
intimate, even wooden. This Woodland Cabin south of Flanders
by Belgian architects Robbrecht
en Daem clearly exhibits such characteristics, due to
its size, siting, layout, and materiality. While these distinct
traits make cabins appealing, these days some of their appeal
also stems from the "unspoiled" nature of the building
type: the reduced (or lack of) energy use, infrastructure,
and other unsustainable process and/or materials. |
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The cabin is sited next to a small
body of water, in an area that affords views of the cabin
from above, below, and to the side. Given these site conditions,
much of the solution is dictated: open the cabin to the water
and treat the small structure as an object "in the round."
The architects raised the cabin off the forest floor on a
wood deck and then echoed
this gesture in the roof, where leaves collect to conceal
the cabin in certain months. |
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The most distinctive aspect of
the cabin is its walls made of standard, square section lumber
stacked in two semi-circular
sections. The radius is dictated by the lengths of the timber
pieces, where each is an extension of the previous, and interlocking
together so no air spaces are created and distinct patterns
are created on the exterior and interior. Additionally, a
slight taper in section is created by this stacking, making
the interior feel even more intimate than its small scale
suggests. |
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The reason for this stacking of
lumber in two semi-circular sections is not to make an architectural
statement, but to create two spaces
out of one. The pinch created by both the circles and the
angle of the entry's glass walls
demarcates the sleeping area
from the seating area, with
the fireplace occupying the pinch point in-between. With this
in mind the design is an intelligent solution that beautifully
melds enclosure and function together in a way that even architecture
outside this appealing building type should endeavor. |
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Woodland Cabin near Flanders, Belgium
by Robbrecht en Daem Architecten |
2008.03.10 |
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