




-based Minnaërt Studio seems to have a budding flair for breathing new life into tired or forgotten places. Led by French-Australian architect and former University of Technology Sydney School of Architecture lecturer, , the studio’s projects include a handful of Paris apartment and office interior renovations—and then most recently, the restoration of an old stone , set on the outskirts of Lormes, somewhere in the Nièvre region of central .
To paint a picture – Lormes is a little village of about 1,400 souls, whose very concise Wikipedia page references just one famous former inhabitant: , a 20th century novelist who wrote mostly about music and the beauty of provincial life. Minnaërt Studio’s repurposed barn sings the same sort of tune – appealing to the simple country life, and basking in the natural glory of protected woodlands, lakes, and traditional farmland.
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Created for a Parisian couple after a little respite and a quiet countryside escape, the barn involves new floors, a large, breezy opening in the western wall, and additional rooms: a , lounge, bedrooms, bathroom, and a pantry. Materials have been left raw where possible, such as timber structures, cladding, steel, and ceramic accents.
The 3x3m opening in the kitchen wall features a deep concrete frame – creating an arresting landscape vista to the west, and an open channel to the surrounding garden. Inside, a structural timber grid guides the logic and layout of the kitchen, connecting the island bench to the stairs and storage space. It’s a nod to the building’s agricultural spirit – with wide, stacked shelves designed to store garden produce.
In the living room, the floor, walls and ceiling form a continuous plywood ribbon, and a large recess for home cinema. A skylight in the master lets light to flood in, and a timber ramp with playful footholds leads up to a timber mezzanine. And in the bathroom a stormy blue-grey mosaic takes over for a custom tub, and the floor is laid with stone-coloured ceramic tile.
Words by .
[Images courtesy of .]
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