Five Little Houses Comprise a Single Home in Denmark

Five Little Houses Comprise a Single Home
Five Little Houses Comprise a Single Home

Jarmund/Vigsnæs Arkitekter designed a home in Denmark, that is split up into five separate buildings, each one being a different part of the home.

A house designed by Jarmund/Vigsnæs Arkitekter is comprised of five separate buildings. Each one is a different part of the home and sits of a beautiful but windy summerhouse village located on the northern tip of Sjælland, Denmark. The house is divided into five separate houses that sure are unique, right? Unlike the usual house, this one has various parts located on a separate structure. There is a kitchen building, parents building, children’s building, guest building and utility building- isn’t that amazing? But that’s not all. The houses are laid out in a star shape so it can provide different outdoor spaces where shelter from the wind could always be found. The design of the house has its different ridge and cornice on the same height, while the width and length vary. These roofs have different angles that make a playful composition in relation to the surrounding houses. It has an inner courtyard which is clad with a darker stone on the floor and walls where heat is stored from the day throughout the evening. I know you are already curious on how the house looks like. Scroll down the page and check the images of the house below.

The site is located in a beautiful but windy summerhouse village on the northern tip of Sjælland, Denmark. The overall house is divided into five separate houses.

There is a kitchen building, parents building, children’s building, guest building and utility building.

The houses are laid out in a star shape, in order to provide different outdoor spaces where shelter from the wind always can be found.

The ridge and cornice of the houses are on the same height, while the width and length vary.

This gives the roofs different angles, making a playful composition in relation to the surrounding houses.

The inner courtyard is clad with a darker stone on the floor and walls to store heat from the day throughout the evening.

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