Run to the Hills!: new cabin architecture
Trying to square your new year’s resolution to get out more with a desire to get away from it all? Your cabin waits…
January 19, 2017 | 11:00 pm CUT

Referencing the barn as typology in terms of its structure, the Rabbit Snare Gorge cabin in Canada's Nova Scotia province, designed by architect Omar Gandhi and New York-studio Design Base 8. Photo: Doublespace Photography



A rural retreat from city living in the form of Austrian office Raumhochrosen’s compact wood cabin, with large picture windows on opposing sides. Fotos: Albrecht Imanuel Schnabel



Studio Padron's diminutive Hemmelig Rom (Norwegian for 'secret room') in Upstate New York, with blackened facade, functions as both guest room and library. Fotos: Jason Koxvold



Elevated via a series of recycled-gas-pipe pilotis (in response to the site's high water table), Canadian office DIN Projects’ Manitoba Pole House features an interior that leaves the structure's frame exposed. Photos: DIN Projects



Architect Omar Gandhi and Design Base 8's Rabbit Snare Gorge project in Canada's Nova Scotia features an archly gabled roof, Corten-steel-framed entrance and a glazed, first-floor balcony. Photos: Doublespace Photography



Intrepid climbers who make it to the top of Mount Kanin in Slovenia can take refuge in OFIS Arhitekti’s dramatically cantilevering micro cabin, which is tethered in place by a series of cables. Fotos: Janez Martincic & Ales Gregoric

