Nestled on the backside of a rocky hillside is a tiny picket cabin surrounded by cypress bushes and buchus. The little dwelling overlooks Muizenberg, certainly one of Cape City’s best-known browsing spots, and occupies 390-square-foot of house. The beautiful view may be loved owing to the home windows seat that has been added to the house. It was designed by architect Alexander McGee and is situated subsequent to his South African dwelling.
Designer: Alexander McGee
“We’re spoiled in South Africa with a number of the most naturally lovely websites discovered anyplace on the planet. As an architect, I view it as my duty to exhibit an alternate resolution to settling in these environments,” mentioned McGee. And, that is the rationale why the roof of the house has been topped with photo voltaic panels – to supply the cabin and the principle dwelling with energy. No gutters have been added to the roof, and this enables McGee and his household to observe the rainwater run off the roof from completely different angles.
At first, the house was an attention-grabbing experiment for McGee. How properly and how briskly may he craft a home in a distant location? To take action, McGee and his crew constructed the complete dwelling off-site in a warehouse, the place they may mess around and experiment with the main points and make completely different modifications and customizations, earlier than lastly assembling the cabin on-site. McGee deserted the standard brick-and-mortar and as an alternative opted for light-weight cross-laminated timber (CLT) to assemble the house. The house offers glorious thermal and sound insulation and creates nearly zero waste throughout the building course of. “Some view it (CLT) because the constructing trade’s solely savior in attaining a close to carbon-neutral footprint,” mentioned McGee. The house took lower than three weeks to assemble on-site!
The house includes a 45-degree pitched roof with big eaves which creates adequate house for a standing mezzanine degree, that may be accessed by way of a retractable ladder. “Regardless that the mattress doesn’t have a base, the elevated nature of it makes you’re feeling extremely protected. It’s nearly nestlike,” added McGee. The house has been outfitted with loads of cupboard space. It includes a Wawa wooden surfboard, handcrafted in Muizenberg, in addition to a great deal of hanging house for garments. Salvaged supplies had been launched wherever potential within the dwelling – for instance, the cedar shelving within the toilet comes from a scrapyard, whereas the reclaimed travertine sink within the kitchen was taken from a stonemason pal of McGee’s.