Fourteen homes where cross-laminated timber creates cosy interiors

Fourteen homes where cross-laminated timber creates cosy interiors أربعة عشر منزلًا حيث يخلق الخشب المصفح تصميمات داخلية مريحة

Fourteen homes where cross-laminated timber creates cozy interiors

Our latest lookbook features cross-laminated timber interiors, including a colorful German vacation home and a tenement-style housing development in Edinburgh, and is part of Dezeen’s Timber Revolution series.

Additionally, Architects looking to offset the carbon emissions of a building often choose cross-laminated timber (CLT), a type of mass timber made from laminated timber sections that can be used as structural building materials.

The material, which is normally from larch, spruce, or pine, absorbs atmospheric carbon as it grows and subsequently retains it during its life in a building.

Additionally, In interiors, CLT can create a luxurious effect even for projects with a tight budget and gives rooms a light, modern feel.

Moreover, This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. Additionally, For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring interiors with split-level living areas, mix-and-match flooring, and homes with cleverly hidden lifts.


The interior of a bedroom in Octothorpe House
Photo is by Jeremy Bitterman / JBSA

Octothorpe House, US, by Mork-Ulnes Architects

The natural forms, custom furniture, and organic colors and textures that appear throughout Octothorpe House were selected by studio Mork-Ulnes Architects for their resemblance to the surrounding Oregon desert landscape.

Moreover, The cabin-cum-house was built using American-made CLT for a client that wanted an “environmentally progressive” and flexible design.


Interior of Bert treehouse by Precht
The photo is by Christian Fletcher

Bert, Austria, by Precht

Hidden in the woodland surrounding the Steirereck am Pogusch restaurant in the rural village of Pogusch. Additionally, This playful tubular guest dwelling was informed by cartoon characters.

Moreover, It was designed by the Austrian architecture studio Precht to feel dark and cozy inside, with the structural CLT walls providing contrast against the black flooring and dark textiles.


Kitchen and dining space in Haus am Hang by AMUNT
Photo is by Rasmus Norlander

Haus am Hang, Germany, by AMUNT

German architecture office AMOUNT was drawn in particular to CLT’s sustainability credentials when creating this hillside vacation home in the Black Forest.

Additionally, Designed for a client who wanted to promote sustainable travel, the home features surfaces and joinery finished in shades of green inspired by local tree species, and its layout was organized to make the most of natural light.


Kynttilä by Ortraum Architects
Photo is by Marc Goodwin

Kynttilä, Finland, by Ortraum Architects

Structural CLT was used to form the floor walls and angled roof of 15-square-meter cabin on Lake Saimaa in Finland.

Additionally, Its gabled form encloses a bedroom and a small kitchen, which feature natural CLT walls. A large bedroom window provides views of the forest outside the cabin.


Interior of CLT House in London by Unknown Works
Photo is courtesy of Unknown Works

CLT House, UK, by Unknown Works

Named after its spruce CLT structure, CLT House is a semi-detached house in east London that architecture studio Unknown Works remodeled and extended to open up and improve its connection to the back garden.

Additionally, On the ground floor, the timber walls, storage, and seating areas create a minimal backdrop for the family’s musical and creative pursuits, parties, and family gatherings.

Furthermore, A combined kitchen and dining space are housed in a bright yellow rear extension that opens onto the garden’s brick-paved patio.


The Rye Apartments by Tikari Works
The photo is by Jack Hobhouse

Rye Apartments, UK, by Tikari Works

The four-story Rye Apartments block in south London was designed by local studio Tikari Works. Which used CLT for the structure and left it exposed across the majority of the apartments’ gabled walls and ceilings.

Additionally, This was combined with spruce wood kitchen cabinetry, storage units, and shelving. Additionally, Terrazzo-style flooring with amber and cream-colored flecks was added to compliment the timber finishes.


R11 loft extension by Pool Leber Architekten
Photo is by Brigida González

R11 loft extension, Germany, by Pool Leber Architekten

The R11 loft extension is a two-story CLT extension that Pool Leber Architekten added to a 1980s housing block in Munich. Creating a series of loft spaces.

Additionally, Inside the lofts, the structural timber was left visible on the walls, ceilings, and floors. The material was also used to create sculptural storage cabinets that double as window seating.


Barretts Grove by Amin Taha Architects
The photo is by Tim Soar

Barretts Grove, UK, Amin Taha Architects

Amin Taha Architects created this six-story CLT block, which contains six apartments, between a pair of detached brick buildings in Stoke Newington, London.

“The ability of the CLT to serve as structure and finish removed the need for plaster-boarded walls, suspended ceilings, cornices, skirtings, tiling, and paint. Therefore reducing by 15 percent the embodied carbon of the building, its construction cost, and time on site,” the studio said.


A CLT split level interior
The photo is by Markus Linderoth

Twelve Houses, Sweden, by Förstberg Ling

The CLT structure that forms the foundations of Twelve Houses by Förstberg Ling has been left exposed throughout the walls, floors, and ceilings of the interior living areas, giving the space a warm and inviting feel.

Moreover, A back bedroom on the first floor overlooks a double-height area of the living room. Which has a concrete floor and reddish-brown wall paneling.


Villa Korup kitchen interior
The photo is by Gabrielle Gualdi

Villa Korup, Denmark, by Jan Henrik Jansen Arkitekter

A CLT structure made from Baltic fir was used to construct this home on the Danish island of Fyn. Which features exposed CLT panels throughout the interiors.

Additionally, Designers Jan Henrik Jansen Arkitekter, Marshall Blecher, and Einrum Arkitekter treated the material with soap and lye to lighten and protect the timber inside.


Interior of Simon Square apartments by Fraser/Livingstone
Photo is by Fredrik Frendin

Simon Square, UK, by Fraser/Livingstone

Comprised six flats set within a mass-timber tenement-style housing development in Edinburgh. Simon Square has a structural timber frame that has been left exposed internally.

Moreover, Architecture studio Fraser/Livingstone hoped that the presence of CLT indoors would improve the residents’ well-being. Additionally, Potted plants and a neutral interior color scheme provide an added sense of calm.

“When solid timber is exposed internally, the D-limonene the timber gives out has been shown to produce calm environments, with occupants’ hearts beating slower, and stress reduced,” project architect Ayla Riom told Dezeen.


Interior of the Biv Punakaiki cabin by Fabric Architecture
The photo is by Nancy Zhou

Biv Punakaiki, New Zealand, by Fabric

In an attempt to balance the high carbon levels of the cabin’s concrete floor and aluminum cladding. Architecture studio Fabric chose to use CLT for the cabin’s structure, which was left exposed inside.

Additionally, the residents can look up through large skylights that punctuate the ceiling and gaze at the stars above.


A cross laminated timber kitchen interior
Photo is by José Hevia

MAS JEC, Spain, by Aixopluc

Catalan architecture office Aixopluc used lightweight materials for this CLT extension. Which is to a traditional Catalan house in the city of Reus.

Moreover, The building was prepared off-site and erected in just two weeks. Another advantage of using CLT is that the thermal mass of the exposed CLT interiors helps to ensure a comfortable internal temperature when the afternoon sun hits the building.


Houten Herenhuis by MAATworks
IJburg Townhouse the Netherlands, by MAATworks

This Amsterdam townhouse was to reference wooden Scandinavian homes.

Moreover, the Architecture studio MAATworks arranged it around an angular staircase made from cross-laminated pine wood. Which also creates the wall and ceilings of the home.

 

Finally, read more on Archup:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *