
The sauna has always been more than a room of heat. It is a place of stillness, where the body slows, the breath deepens, and the mind begins to loosen. Architecture has the power to enrich this ritual — to frame silence, to choreograph the movement between warmth and air, to turn a simple act of sweating into a profound experience of presence. But what else belongs in this rhythm? How might architecture extend the ritual of renewal beyond the sauna itself?
In Iceland, the answer is often found in light and growth. At Lake Mývatn — a volcanic landscape of steam vents, moss, and silence — the forces of fire and fragility are always entwined. Here, a greenhouse is not just a space for cultivation, but a chamber of recovery, illumination, and life. To step from heat into green, from stone into glass, is to prolong the ritual: to rest, to breathe, to encounter warmth in another form. It is this dialogue — between fire and light, stone and plant — that gives the Iceland Slow Sauna its unique brief.
The assignment calls for a modest retreat that unites a sauna and a greenhouse into a single structure, a small architecture that is at once intimate and expansive. The challenge is not to build larger, but to build with sensitivity — to explore how transitions between hot and cool, enclosed and open, dark and bright can become a journey of their own. This competition asks architects to think not in terms of objects, but of experiences, rituals, and atmospheres.
