Architecture and Interior: Suyama Peterson Deguchi has designed the cabin Cities in Medina, Washington. Hosting / Urban Cabin with a simple shelter roofs, terraces tucked under the roof of the warehouse to strengthen connections to the beautiful scenery outside.
The exterior siding on the east wall of the long continued through the interior space, and with a minimal window details, blurring the boundaries of space inside.
According to Suyama Peterson Deguchi:
Tiny House Design in Urban Cabin is designed for a retired couple interested in streamlining and simplifying their lives. The couple lived at the site for 26 years, creating and maintaining personal protection but they are urban.
The challenge is to design a response in accordance with the ideals of living with less in an environment that is prone to exaggeration. Conceptually, the design is inspired by the picnic shelter in the woods.
The ideas of primitive picnic shelters give direction to both the shape of the building and the minimum program requirements. All elements of the program were reduced from excesses and distilled into elemental.Tiny House Design
Consisting of a simple shelter roof, supported on the east by a solid wall, which protects residents of the busy public park. Informed by the topography, the house was slightly recessed into the landscape, involves a visual connection to the site.
The rest of the west-facing elevation consisting of windows and doors that embrace the surrounding garden and pool. A deep overhang at the end of a long roof makes the extension of space outside the glass enclosure.
The terrace tucked under the roof of the warehouse to strengthen the connection to the outside of the beautiful scenery. The exterior siding on the east wall of the long continued through the interior space, and with a minimal window details, blurring the boundaries of space inside.
The exterior siding on the east wall of the long continued through the interior space, and with a minimal window details, blurring the boundaries of space inside.
According to Suyama Peterson Deguchi:
Tiny House Design in Urban Cabin is designed for a retired couple interested in streamlining and simplifying their lives. The couple lived at the site for 26 years, creating and maintaining personal protection but they are urban.
The challenge is to design a response in accordance with the ideals of living with less in an environment that is prone to exaggeration. Conceptually, the design is inspired by the picnic shelter in the woods.
The ideas of primitive picnic shelters give direction to both the shape of the building and the minimum program requirements. All elements of the program were reduced from excesses and distilled into elemental.Tiny House Design
Consisting of a simple shelter roof, supported on the east by a solid wall, which protects residents of the busy public park. Informed by the topography, the house was slightly recessed into the landscape, involves a visual connection to the site.
The rest of the west-facing elevation consisting of windows and doors that embrace the surrounding garden and pool. A deep overhang at the end of a long roof makes the extension of space outside the glass enclosure.
The terrace tucked under the roof of the warehouse to strengthen the connection to the outside of the beautiful scenery. The exterior siding on the east wall of the long continued through the interior space, and with a minimal window details, blurring the boundaries of space inside.
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