dimanche 9 septembre 2012


Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke
Carnachan Architects


As the tides erode the northern coast of New Zealand, this house on a sled by architects Crosson Clarke Carnachan can be towed off the beach and out of harm’s way (+ slideshow).


Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Located within a designated erosion zone on the Coromandel Peninsula, the house was designed as a mobile structure to satisfy a planning condition requiring that all buildings in the area be removable.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
A huge shutter folds up across the exterior to reveal and shade a two-storey glazed facade, which has an open-plan living room and mezzanine bedroom behind.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
More shutters lift up to uncover windows on each side of the house, and a roof deck is hidden behind the parapet walls.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
A family of five use the hut as a holiday home and the three children sleep in a three-tiered bunk bed in the back room.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects also recently completed a charred wooden cabin –take a look at it here.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Surprisingly this isn’t the first building on a sled we’ve featured. The first was a sauna on a Finnish island.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects

Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Photography is by Jackie Meiring.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Here’s a description from Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects:
On the shore of an idyllic white sandy beach on New Zealand’s Coromandel Peninsula rests an elegant hut. The site lies within the coastal erosion zone, where all building must be removable. This is taken literally and the hut is designed on two thick wooden sleds for movement back up the site or across the beach and onto a barge.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
The hut is a series of simple design moves. The aesthetic is natural and reminiscent of a beach artifact/perhaps a surf-life-saving or observation tower. The fittings and mechanics are industrial and obvious, the structure is gutsy and exposed.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
The holiday retreat is designed to close up against the elements when not in use, and measures a mere 40 square meters. It accommodates a family of five in a kitchen/dining/living area, a bathroom and two sleeping zones, the children’s accommodating a three tiered bunk.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Closed up, the rough macrocarpa cladding blends into the landscape and perches unobtrusively on the dunes. The rear being clad in “flat sheet” a cheap building material found in many traditional New Zealand holiday homes.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
These clients sought to explore the real essence of holiday living; small, simple, functional. The normal rituals of daily life; cooking dining, sleeping and showering all being done connected to the outside.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
The two storey shutter on the front facade winches open to form an awning, shading the interior from summer sun while allowing winter sun to enter. It reveals a double height steel framed glass doors that open the interior much like the tent flap, connecting the living and the ladder accessed mezzanine bedroom to the extraordinary view.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects
Within, the interior is the epitome of efficiency, every available space is utilised from cabinetry toe spaces to secret cubby holes within the children’s bunks.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects

The hut is totally sustainable from its modest size to the use of timber in its cladding, structure, lining and joinery and from its worm tank waste system to the separate portable grey water tanks. This is a new way of looking at holiday living in this sensitive dune environment.
Hut on Sleds by Crosson Clarke Carnachan Architects

Hypercubus by WG3



Hypercubus by WG3
Austrian architects WG3 have designed a mobile hotel room that could be delivered to all kinds of outdoor locations.
Hypercubus by WG3
The small modular container, named Hypercubus, provides enough space for two people to stay inside comfortably.
Hypercubus by WG3
Instead of creating a rectilinear container, the architects designed a room that tips upwards at the front and lifts the entrance off the ground.
Hypercubus by WG3
The prepaid accommodation was planned for sites with available facilities, but each room still comes with its own sink and toilet.
Hypercubus by WG3
Although just a prototype at present, the mobile rooms could be used for hire at large outdoor events.
Hypercubus by WG3
Other mobile architecture we’ve featured includes a booth for napping at airports and a tiny travelling theatre.
Hypercubus by WG3
Photography is by Karin Lernbeiß.
Hypercubus Mobile Hotel room for 2 people
The Hypercubus concept is based on three fundamental concepts:
» the use of open areas with available infrastructure (alternatively also self-sufficient)
» the construction of small modular living units that are transportable
» the creation of a new concept in tourism (the prepaid apartment) with a uniform corporate design.
Hypercubus by WG3
The project develops an idea for tourism in the respective region. The ‘minimal housing’ apartments use existing resources, are transportable thanks to their mobile construction and are used where they are needed depending on the season. In this way, the very same object can be used at various locations during the year, according to wherever there is demand at the time. This means that location-dependent deficits in utilisation can be compensated out of season.
Hypercubus by WG3
Plan
For larger events, the living units can be brought together from across the region. The apartments create their own corporate design and thus form an identity for each (new) location.
Hypercubus by WG3
Section – click above for larger image