Forest House

hideaway under pine trees

Category:

Residential

Year:

2010

Location:

Klein Köris

A crystal-clear lake, surrounded by dense pine forest. Sandy soils interwoven with roots. And a wonderful silence, broken only by the sounds of nature. In this idyllic setting this beautiful forest property is situated. In the 1920s, it was part of an artists’ colony. Today, it serves as a refuge and place of relaxation.

Idea

Originally, a simple wooden summer house from 1926 stood on this property in the southern region of Berlin. This charming little house was in such a desolate state that renovation was not an option though. The conceptual approach was to recreate the atmosphere of the dark forest cottage, its proportions and simple construction in the new weekend house. The building is positioned exactly on the former site, in the center of the property. The new cabin was entirely built as a wooden structure, like its forerunner. From the outside, it is clad in dark brown glazed pine paneling.
With its simple form and understated appearance, it blends into the natural surroundings and gives the impression that it has always been there. At the same time, the external appearance, with its slightly overhanging roof and dark wooden façade, plays with the mythologies and fairy tales of houses in the forest.

Appearance

The dark building is accentuated by a building incision and a few deliberately placed façade openings with extra-wide frames. In contrast to the dark brown building, these openings and frames are painted white. These color accents also refer to the interior, which is lined on all sides with white-painted pine cladding.
The outer and inner board cladding has a milled round profile. This design feature for the ceiling, roof and walls gives the space a specific atmosphere and is also a reference to the façades and partial interior pane ling of the building that existed before.

Interior

The centerpiece of the weekend home is the main living and recreation room. This room extends to the roof with an open space and naturally includes the other areas, such as the gallery above the large western overhang. The rather narrow room appears much larger thanks to the façade-wide glazing on the ground floor and the spatial extensions of the adjoining veranda.
The kitchen and bathroom are designed as separate rooms and are, like the living room, accessible via the small corridor.
This Corridor also accommodates the built-in pine plywood furniture such as the wardrobe and storage cupboards.
The kitchen is designed as an open, yet independent room with a large opening to the living room and a large panoramic window of the same size with a view into the forest. The furniture was also customized entirely from pine plywood.
In addition to the rooms on the ground floor, the sleeping berths are located on the upper floor.

“The new interpretation with attention to detail was a success: a refuge of 62 square-meters in the middle of nature.”
Rainer Schulze – Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, 2015

Facts

Building project: Forest house | New building of a vacation home in the pine forest of Brandenburg
Client: private
Completion: 2010
Photographer: Clemens Poloczek, Werner Huthmacher
Architectural films: Ertzui Film