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150 Best Cottage and Cabin Ideas PDF

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CONTENTS Introduction Gabled, Hipped and Pyramid Roofs Country House in Colorado Foster Loop Cabin Goat Peak Cabin Bunny Lane Bug Acres of Woodstock Creekside Cabin Holiday House Vindö Turon House Brockloch Bothy Recreational House Garage Recreational Island House Lake Joseph Boathouse Little Lost Cabin Shed and Saltbox Roofs Hammer Cabin Aluminum Cabin SHIFT Cottage Decatur Cabin Kiss House Eagle Harbor Cabin Fairwind Cabin Idaho Cabin Gulf Cabins Pine Forest Cabin House in a Meadow Spudich Cabin Farmhouse Hölick Sea Resort Weekend House La Luge Methow Cabin Lake Wenatchee residence Homestead Cabin Wood Boat House Apelle Flat and Custom Roofs MR House Four-cornered Villa M1 House Nighthawk Retreat Weekend House Zen Garden House Salagnac Cabins House in the Woods House on Crete Koby Cottage Tintaldra Rondolino Nakai House in Utah Cabin 2 Copper Cube Brockloch Tree House Directory About the Author Also from Harper Design Credits Copyright About the Publisher INTRODUCTION Notions of nature, remoteness, simplicity, and comfort come to mind when trying to describe the timeless allure of cabins and cottages. This suggests that, perhaps, the idea behind these constructions has to do with lifestyle as much as with architecture. Who hasn’t dreamed of a small cabin in the woods or a cottage by a lake? We have all grown up with images of the rustic homes of pioneers and settlers of the American West. Their adventurous and rugged lifestyles appealed to all of us, in part because of their rustic log cabins and idyllic landscapes. Truth is that those cabins and cottages originally fulfilled a need for protection from the elements and wild animals. Their compact scale and sturdy construction satisfied this necessity. With time, the old mountain architecture quickly got romanticized and cabins became stylish. The once simple and basic structures evolved to become fancy, spacious accommodations, opening the interior to the great outdoors. What hasn’t changed is the idea of a cabin or a cottage as a getaway. A getaway offers the chance to disconnect from daily stress, with only nature and the sky above as witnesses to our quiet time with just our thoughts and our most treasured essentials. Almost everyone has fantasized of having a refuge near a lake or a stream, in the mountains or in a meadow, and far from anyone else. Quite a pleasant thought, and actually quite attainable. Remoteness seems to be a key ingredient of the getaway experience. But what draws people to spend time in remote locations? It’s as if the farther we go from a metropolitan lifestyle, the freer and, consequently, the better we feel. Humans seem to have an innate tendency to seek a connection with nature as an antidote to the pressures of urban life. The cottages and cabins featured in this volume honor the sites on which they are located and respect the ecological value of their environments. We can see in these projects how their design has been guided by a consideration of views—both immediate and distant—as well as by topography, sun angles, and wind currents and by their natural settings in general. The remoteness of some locations requires the use of basic sustainable strategies such as passive solar heating, shading, and off-grid power systems. Difficult access to the sites limits the choice of materials to locally available timber and stone, or premanufactured building parts. In this respect, modular construction can facilitate the building process and makes potential future expansions simple. 150 Best Cottage and Cabin Ideas pledges allegiance to a modest architectural archetype that recalls pioneers and settlers eking out a simple existence, with few to no commodities, using only the locally available natural resources, and felling trees that were then stacked and notched together to create simple shelters. These constructions are symbols of retreat, refuge, and a more or less rugged, independent lifestyle. The enduring style of the cabin or cottage is that of a sturdy, solid shelter from the elements. Their simplicity seems to prevail in modern constructions and so do their predominant features: exposed-beam ceilings, built-in furnishings, and large, open floor plans. Many of these building designs take after the gable and shed roof traditional construction. Others take a modern twist on the established building typologies. The importance of the roof as a basic architectural feature has served to organize the contents of this book under three categories: Gabled, Hipped, and Pyramid Roofs; Shed and Saltbox Roofs; and Flat and Custom Roofs. Roofs speak to us of shelter. Their basic forms have come down to us unchanged through ages. Their silhouettes are still unmistakable in today’s modern home. From the outside, a roof defines the look of a home; from the inside, it gives form to the spaces that it shelters. Today’s cottages and cabins are often spacious and comfortable, and they often have more than one floor, with enough room to accommodate visitors. The interior is open and flexible combining various functions. They are also likely to include fully equipped kitchens, whirlpool tubs, saunas, and other luxuries. Large windows and doors blur the distinction between interior and exterior. They face the surrounding landscape, making nature appear as part of the interior and allowing interior activities to spill out onto surrounding terraces. Perhaps it’s not so much about vacationing, but about escaping to a place with a minimum of interference, a refuge from daily stresses. In a cabin away from the urban environment, we can return to living at least a part of our time in a more natural way. Gabled, Hipped, and Pyramid Roofs Country House in Colorado 2,766 sq ft Turnbull Griffin Haesloop Architects Walden, Colorado, United States © David Wakely Photography The natural setting was clearly in mind when the architects designed this ranch-style house, using wood and stone to blend in with the beauty of the landscape. The selection of materials pairs with the archetypal house shape to give the building a homey appeal and a strong sense of place. All aspects of the architecture seen from the outside—such as shapes and proportions, as well as materials and finishes that are used to articulate the surfaces—give the interior definition. North-facing section East-facing section Ground floor plan

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