The house was refurbished with the future in mind, but Mjölk couldn’t quite bear to let go of all the wild and unwieldy aspects of the past either. “It was essential that we didn’t strip the cabin of its intangible soul, the fragrance of the timber and the stark chill of the granite blocks,” state the architects. “We kept what we could. What remained, we’ve complemented with a new quality that doesn’t seek to compete with the past.”
Across two levels, the home oscillates between familiar and futuristic, the unusual layout captivating with a multitude of vibes. The oven and the stove in the sitting room became the heart of the
In the entrance corridor, steel stairs sit in subtle dialogue with old beams and an original preserved thatched roof, all illuminated by a round
Upstairs is dedicated to private space. A glass-walled master bedroom has a view directly into the orbed skylight. In the children’s bedroom, there is also a playroom, for flexibility depending on the weather. For the other two bedrooms, the architects reimagined classic rooms of a mountain cabin.
The interior is furnished in a naturalistic way that reflects the Mjölk architekti’s overall approach. Most of the new equipment consists of original furniture and accessories that they designed themselves and complemented with old furniture lovingly selected by the clients themselves.
Not far from the cabin lies perhaps the best feature of all—an almost invisible sauna constructed out of an inconspicuous concrete form set in the ground with a view over the clearing behind the house.
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