Big Cabin | Little Cabin / Renée del Gaudio

Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Table, Beam, ChairBig Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Wood, WindowsBig Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Door, WindowsBig Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - WindowsBig Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - More Images+ 8

Fairplay, United States
  • Architects: Renée del Gaudio
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2100 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Photographs
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  CBR Products, Country Plank, Loewen, Pacific Millwork, Siding Stain, Wood Stove
Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Windows
© David Lauer Photography

Text description provided by the architects. Cabin (‘kab en’) 1. a small simple dwelling. 2. a shelter made of wood, situated in a wild or remote area.

We all carry preconceived ideas of the word “cabin” in our collective memory -- a family gathering place, a place of rest after a long day in nature, pegs on the wall to hang your coat. Ultimately, a cabin tells a story of it’s particular place and time in history, and of the people who dwell inside. Big Cabin | Little Cabin strives to embody the character and sensation of a traditional cabin, and tell the story of this particular family, all within a purely modern framework.

Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Door, Windows
© David Lauer Photography

Set high on a rocky cliff at 10,000 feet elevation, the pair of cabins command panoramic views over Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo mountains, the Collegiate Peaks, and the South Platte River. A thick forest of bristlecone and ponderosa pines surround the property to the north, giving the cabins a sense of privacy and protection.

Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Windows, Beam
© David Lauer Photography

Upon approach, the two cabins frame the sweeping view, and create a wind-protected space in between. The buildings are connected with open grate steel decking, creating a slip resistant platform that allows snow to fall through to below. Great care is taken to allow an existing mature pine to surface through the metal grate deck and stand proudly in the space between. To minimize excavation and maintain the natural topography of the site, the house is built on isolated pier foundations.

Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Wood, Windows
© David Lauer Photography

The cabin’s gabled roof form and rustic materials recall the area’s early vernacular buildings. Exterior cedar siding is stained dark to blend the house with the surrounding forest. Large expanses of glass connect the occupants to the remarkable landscape beyond. Plywood interior walls and ceilings keep the cabin low key and rustic.

Ground Floor Plan

A simple, open plan allows daylight and breezes to naturally filter through all sides of the home. High efficiency electric appliances and LED lighting keep energy consumption to a minimum. Closed and open cell foam insulation, double and triple pane windows with low-e glass, and rolling barn door shutters keep the house cool in the summer and warm in the winter. Heating is provided with a 96% efficiency boiler, radiant floor tubing set in a concrete slab, and a high efficiency wood burning stove. The cabin is pre-wired for a 3kw array of photovoltaic panels which will supply 100% of the cabin’s electricity.

Big Cabin | Little Cabin  / Renée del Gaudio - Table, Beam, Chair
© David Lauer Photography

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Cite: "Big Cabin | Little Cabin / Renée del Gaudio" 22 Mar 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/891203/big-cabin-little-cabin-renee-del-gaudio> ISSN 0719-8884

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