Paarman Tree House

Cape Town, South Africa – Malan Vorster Architecture and Design

Project Year:  2016

Area:  117.0 m2

Photographers:  Adam Letch, Mickey Hoyle

Tree houses are places associated with fun and adventure, and of times spent outdoors. It is the ultimate hideout spot. Wanting an “adult hideaway place”, the homeowner added the Paarman Tree House into his family’s estate.

The idea was to build it in such a way that it enhances its surroundings. Unlike the usual tree house that’s built in or on a tree, this one stands with the trees. It appears floating, levitating, off the ground – entry is via a suspended ramp.

This three-level tree house features geometric details. The layout is square with four circles placed on each side. The house was designed to take full advantage of the surrounding views. Tall glass windows bring the outside in through vertical slats made from red cedar.

At the ground level, there’s the plant room. The living room, kitchen, a dining alcove, and a patio are found at the first level. The bedroom is on the second level, and a roof deck on the third.

The Paarman Tree House is a sanctuary that fittingly captures its owner’s special connection with nature.

 Notes from the Architect:

Malan Vorster have been involved with previous projects on this tree-rich property, and were commissioned to design a small contemporary house to compliment the existing collection of buildings – spatially organised around a modern interpretation of the Cape Werf. Inspired by the trees on the estate, the client requested a cabin-like, one bedroomed hide-away resembling a tree house.

The structure is located in a small clearing amongst forest-like gardens, and respond similarly to the verticality of the surrounding trees in order to maximise views from the highest portion of the site. Inspiration was drawn from the timber cabins of Horace Gifford and Kengo Kuma’s notions of working with the void or in-between space, while Louis Kahn’s mastery of pure form and the detailing ethic of Carlo Scarpa informed a process of geometric restraint and handcrafted manufacturing.

The organisational diagramme of the structure explores the pure geometry of a square, with each side divided into three modules and where two of these modules determine the diameter of a circle on each of the four sides of the square – resulting in a pin-wheel plan layout. A square is directional and a circle not – the square relates to the North/South site geometry and the four circles to the organic and natural surroundings. Each circle’s centre is the location for a column, and circular rings, supporting the floor beams above, are connected to the columns by means of branch-like arms. Each ring circumscribes a half-round space ancillary to the main square living space on that level.

The building becomes a vertically arranged “clearing in the forest”, with living space on level one, a bedroom on level two and a roof deck on the third. A plant room is located at ground level below the building. The half round bays accommodate a patio, dining alcove and stair on the living level, a bathroom on the bedroom level and a built-in seat on the roof deck level – the pure geometries provide articulation to the spaces.

The building lightly touches the ground, and entry is by means of a suspended timber and Corten steel ramp. The columns, arms and rings are constructed from laser-cut and folded Corten steel plate, and each column is divided into four ‘trunks’ in the interest of transparency, slenderness and to allow floor beams and windows to pass through the centre points of the rings.

The steel trees support timber floors beams, facade glazing and a western red cedar building envelope. The connections between steel and timber are expressed by means of hand-turned brass components.

All materials are left untreated, and will express the passing of time as they weather naturally with the surrounding trees.

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Exterior Views:

Interior Views:

Drawing Views:

Do you love tree houses? You better go check out Baumraum Treehouse, too!

 

 

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