Sunset Cabin, Lake Simcoe, Ontario |
Wednesday, 16 April 2008 |

The owner couple of this beautiful pre-fabricated cabin on the shores
of Lake Simcoe in Ontario, Canada, has been coming to their large
recreational property for a quarter-century. But the big property in a
great recreational location translated into lots of overnight guests
and no privacy for the owners.
They felt they needed a
“getaway,” a place at their own property where they could capture the
peace and serenity of the surrounding four-season nature without
disturbing any of the existing trees or structures. They needed a place
that remembers what the Simcoe cottage-country is all about.
The brilliant, award-winning solution by Toronto-based Taylor Smyth Architects
is the one-room Sunset Cabin, a real cabin with a decidedly
contemporary feel. The wonderful cabin has won several architectural
and design awards and met the clients’ needs perfectly.
It is a
one-room (190 square feet in size), self-contained box that was built
by furniture craftsmen in four weeks in a Toronto parking lot and
installed on site in 10 days.
Three of the exterior walls are
floor-to-ceiling glass and of those, two are encased in horizontal
cedar-screens for privacy, shade and light effects inside. One of the
cedar screens has a large opening providing a direct view of the sunset
from the built-in bed. The rest of the screen has random smaller gaps
to allow various vignettes of the surrounding nature and to create
fantastic light patterns inside. The slats are positioned so that there
is no direct view in from the outside, but at the same time, it the
inside feels almost wall-less.

The untreated cedar of the outer structure will turn silvery grey over
time, helping the cabin blend in with its natural surroundings. In
addition, the roof, visible from the existing main building, is a green
roof planted with native plants of the area, further ensuring that the
building mixes in with the landscape rather than sticks out in it.
All
interior surfaces are unpainted birch veneer plywood, including the
built-in storage cabinets. Doors at both ends of the cabin allow for
cross ventilation. The interior floor extends outside to form a deck
where the rustic feel continues with the screened-off outdoor shower.
The
owners are apparently spending more time at their property than ever
before. They enjoy the cabin year-round, heating it by a wood-burning
stove and, if needed, electric heaters. Most likely, they are not
inviting guests to share the space, so we can join in only by admiring
the images. By Tuija Seipell
|