Summer House. Sjæland, Denmark
The site is located in a beautiful, windy summerhouse village on the nofthern tip of Sjæland, Denmark. It is a summerhouse for a family of five, and a dog. The project is an assembly of five small buildings gathered around a wind shielded courtyard like a miniature village. The layout is well known in this area, often used for organizing traditional farm buildings.
There is a kitchen building, parents building, children's building, guest building and utility building.
The concept serves different purposes beside the issue of a wind shielded courtyard: There are no indoor transportation areas, this makes for an active outdoor living and reduces the built area. A certain distance between different functions and users is allowed for by the detachment. The small buildings also define outer wind shielded bays disposed for sheltering and gardening, all accessible from the inner courtyard.
The ridge and cornice of the houses are on the same height, white the width and length vary. This gives the roofs different angles, making a playful composition in relanon to the surrounding summer houses. The inner courtyard is covered with a darker stone on the floor to store heat from the day throughout the evening. Roofs and walls are covered with corrugated sheets of sea water aluminum, and the gable walls are clad with Siberian larch.
Location: Denmark
Building type: Summer House
Client: Witheld at the owners request
Size: 123 m2
Schedule: Completed 2012
Consultants: Ole Willerup, Rikke Oberg
Primary architects: Einar Jarmund, Håkon Vigsnzes, Alessandra Kosberg, Lars Hamran, Jens Herman Næss