The appeal of tree houses is fairly obvious: seclusion, sustainability, coziness, communion with nature. Of course, often times those are qualities that are felt rather than understood–there’s a reason that, for many youngsters, the first real architectural impulse is to want a nest among the trees. But tree houses can retain their magic for adults, too. And as a gorgeous new book from Taschen shows, when that childhood dream is realized with grown-up resources, the results can be truly stunning.
Tree Houses: Fairy Tale Castles in the Air is a 350-page tome that collects 50 diverse tree houses from around the globe. In some cases, the structures are houses in the truest sense; one section is dedicated to the Kombai tribe of Indonesia, who build homes at dizzying heights of over a hundred feet in trees in the foothills of the Jayawijaya Mountains. Others are built for specific activities, like the Meditation Tree House, a simple structure, erected outside Rome, which offers a tranquil space for the owner to reflect.
But many of the projects included take vastly more experimental forms. And if you’re already uprooting convention and building a house in a tree, why not? The Free Spirit Spheres, located in British Columbia, are a series of hanging spherical cabins, connected by a series of rope ladders that borrow from sailboat riggings (adventurous travelers can rent the tree balls on a nightly basis). The Lake Nest Tree House, in New York, is representative of another tree-house microtrend, essentially a bird’s nest built at human scale. The Honey Sphere tree house, built in Beverly Hills, does away with walls and ceilings altogether–it was built by Robby Krieger, guitarist for The Doors, as a place to observe nature, and it’s little more than a platform encircled by an elegant geodesic sphere.
2 comments
Reblogged this on Musings of a Biophiliac and commented:
This is cool, i don’t understand the wolf pelt hanging on the wall in that picture? Is that supposed to be cool or what?
Reblogged this on Curiositats Industrials and commented:
Dormir en un arbol és una idea muy romantica.
En el Blog de Moss & Fog podemos ver 18 fantasticas cabañas en los arboles.
Yo vivo en Cataluña, por eso quiero añadir las que encontramos en Sant Hilari Sacalm, Girona. Hay 10 preciosas habitaciones de hotel colocadas en los arboles, cada una tiene un nombre en particular de un pajaro de la zona.
Lo recomiendo!
Si habéis ido, decidme como os fué la experiencia, me gustaría saber que se siente!