23 Unconventional Homes Built Around Trees

From Kyoto, Japan, to Austin, Texas, these dwellings take “bringing the outside in” to the next level.

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Designing homes with nature in mind has become increasingly common, whether the focus is on sourcing sustainable construction materials or forging connections between the interior spaces and surrounding landscape. It comes with good reason: The benefits of having greenery in your home include reduced stress, better focus, and cleaner air. These 23 residences take things a step further by incorporating trees into the layout.

Life in This Verdant Vietnamese Home Is a Walk in the Park

Ho Chi Minh City–based firm VTN Architecture designs homes with lush interiors to combat the shortage of green spaces in the area. The Stepping Park House exudes a greenhouse vibe with a plethora of trees and foliage spanning all three levels of the 5,081-square-foot home.

Photo by Hiroyuki Oki

A Family Home in Austin, Texas, Has an Oak Tree Growing Through It

The Constant Springs Residence in Austin, Texas, is built around a pair of massive oak trees—one of which shoots through an ipe deck and into a void in the overhanging cedar roof. "The hole also allows light to penetrate deeper into the house," notes designer Kevin Alter, principal of Alterstudio Architecture.

Photo by Casey Dunn

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A Ficus Tree Sprouts Up in a Sun-Soaked House in Kyoto, Japan

Architect Joe Chikamori worked with a young couple in Kyoto, Japan, to create an open-plan home for their family with a double-height living room at the center. Since the compact site left little room for a backyard garden, the living area was developed as an interior courtyard situated around an indoor tree. 

Photo by Yosuke Ohtake

A Crumbling Home in Belgium Is Renovated Around a 40-Foot Tree Trunk

Local firm Atelier Vens Vanbelle renovated a decaying house in Ghent, Belgium, by gutting the multistory building, restoring the brick facade, and replacing the roof—then lowering a nearly 40-foot oak tree into the structure by crane. The home’s various levels were constructed in a spiral formation around the trunk to create an open interior space without walls in the living areas. 

Photo by Tim Van de Velde

This Tree House Getaway in England Transports Guests Into a Green Wonderland

Part of an environmentally conscious glamping retreat in Dorset, England, this two-story tree house stands on high stilts to minimize its effect on the land. Inside, there’s a circular living room with a revolving fireplace, as well as a bedroom with a skylight, a bespoke kitchen, and an updated bathroom. The exterior deck includes an open-air shower and a spiral staircase that leads to the top level, where a hot tub and sauna await.

Courtesy of Mallinson

This Multilevel Singapore Home Is a Living Urban Jungle

Designed by Singapore-based Chang Architects, the Tree House at Jalan Elok holds a lush sanctuary within its concrete walls. Greenery extends the full height of the three-story building, while ferns and trees permeate the living spaces and central atrium on the ground level.

Courtesy of Albert Lim K.S.

Inside Architect Miguel Angel Aragonés’s Museum-Like Mexico City Home

At architect Miguel Ángel Aragonés's Mexico City residence, angular, white walls enclose monochromatic outdoor living spaces that are tempered by an abundance of greenery. The house is part of a compound that includes a design studio office and two other residences that Miguel rents out for public events—or to people who want to stay "a day, a month, or a year." 

Photo: Joe Fletcher

This Brilliant Brazilian Home Was Designed Around an Imposing Tree

At this indoor/outdoor family home in São Paulo, the gardens occupy around 50 percent of the 10,764-square-foot site. Global firm Perkins + Will used one tree with large, outstretched branches as the guiding force to design the surrounding kitchen, living, and dining areas.

Courtesy of Nelson Kon

A Concrete-and-Glass Home in Lima, Peru, Twists Around 25 Trees 

Lima-based firm 51-1 Arquitectos renovated this 1940s colonial residence by fashioning an angular "snake" form that generates its own topography. Dubbed Casa Serpiente, the structure draws the garden indoors and merges the living areas across the 15,000-square-foot site. 

Photo: Cristóbal Palma

Spanish Colonialism and Case Study Tradition Merge at This Lush Los Angeles Home

When architect Jeremy Levine and his wife, Robin, remodeled their house in the Eagle Rock district of Los Angeles, they chose to keep it at the scale of other houses in the neighborhood. They expanded the back and front of the structure by building decks around existing trees on the site. A young, drought-tolerant Tristania conferta (also known as Australian brush box tree) grows up through the "chill-out room" under the deck at the rear of the house.

Photo by Tom Fowiks

Cyprus Trees Protect This Beach House From the Ocean Breeze

San Francisco–based studio Aidlin Darling Design fashioned a Cor-Ten steel addition to a two-story home designed by esteemed Bay Area architect Ernest Born in 1950. The team took pains during construction to preserve the cypress trees that give the Great Highway House so much of its charm.

Photo by Robert Schlatter

A Narrow Courtyard Joins a Unique Two-Family Home in Vietnam

Architect Toan Nghiem of a21 Studio designed the Saigon House to merge Ho Chi Minh City’s typical architectural and stylistic details. Native trees are planted on the ground floor as well as on balconies and in the steel frames, covering the home with plants and bringing a piece of the natural world inside. A rear alleyway in the joint family home serves as a living and dining room, while an overhead netted area offers a playground for the children.

Photo by Quang Tran

A 20-Foot-Tall Garden Room Anchors This Tiny House in Tokyo

It’s not easy to transform a 15-foot-wide site (wedged between houses in every direction) into a home that feels spacious. Tokyo-based firm Mamm-design’s solution was to dedicate two-thirds of the 653-square-foot residence into a central garden room. The kitchen, bedroom, bath, and home office are all connected to a gray-brick terrace, which is anchored by an evergreen ash tree.

Courtesy of (c) DAICI ANO / FWD

A Prefab Home in Los Angeles Makes a Maple Tree in the Courtyard Its Focal Point

The Tatami House, designed by Swiss architect Roger Kurath of Design*21, features a Japanese maple in the central courtyard, following the traditional Japanese concept of bringing the outside scenery in. Because the tree had to be planted before the ipe deck was laid, Kurath designed a small, removable panel to allow the homeowners to tend to the tree and access its base. 

Photo by Jessica Haye and Clark Hsiao

An Austin Home Is Grounded by Mature Oak Trees

Because the Lake View Residence’s building site in Austin, Texas, had a collection of mature trees that the clients wanted to preserve, the team at Alterstudio Architecture created cutouts in the deck and overhang. Mulch and living ground covers—including Big Blue liriope, marsilea, and Palisades zoysia turf—help retain moisture within the soil and lower its temperature to protect the roots of the property’s live oak trees.

Photo by Casey Dunn

A Woodland Home on a Japanese Island Blurs the Indoor/Outdoor Divide

What differentiates a house designed by architects from a woodland nest built by a robin or a rabbit? That question—and a desire to narrow the gap between the two— inspired the 1,300-square-foot dwelling that architect Keisuke Maeda designed for a teacher, her two teenage daughters, and their cat in the hills of Onomichi, on the southern end of the Japanese island of Honshu. "It’s a nest that’s dug into the ground and covered with fallen leaves, where inside and outside flow into each other," says Maeda. "That seemed right for a house near the woods."

Photo by Hiroshi Ueda

An Architect’s Affordable Family Home Embraces an Arboreal Atmosphere in Missouri

Rather than utilizing a traditional frame construction, architect Jamie Darnell built his family’s home in Kansas City, Missouri, using SIPs (structural insulated panels) that came in four-by-eight-foot sections. With ladder-like steps leading to the front door, the house feels like a polished tree house. Jamie even constructed the ipe decking to accommodate an existing tree by the garage entrance.

Photo: Chad Holder

This Minimalist Japanese Home Pivots Around an Indoor Garden

Satoshi Saito of SAI Architectural Design Office took the directive to heart when a young Osaka family requested a home in which they could "feel green." The indoor/outdoor residence essentially comprises two structures that are unified by a double-height, courtyard-like space with clerestory windows that usher in ample natural light.   

Photo by Norihito Yamauchi

A Towering Tree Grows Through the Roof of This Tropical Sanctuary

Singapore-based firm Formwerkz Architects designed the Aperture House with a low-dipping, mono-pitched roof with a large opening for a tall indoor tree. The steep, slanted roof creates semi-outdoor spaces on the home’s second story where residents can relax outdoors while being shielded from sun.

Photo by Fabian Ong

A Tree Grows Through the Roof of This Radically Updated 1964 Eichler

In Sunnyvale, California, architect Ryan Leidner transformed a 2,000-square-foot Eichler that was originally designed in the 1960s by A. Quincy Jones. "The atrium is the first place you enter," says Leidner. "Traditionally, it’s a hardscape area with some potted plants, but we wanted it to be more like a full garden, right in the middle of the house."

Photo: Joe Fletcher

A Light-Filled Atrium With a Tree House Anchors a Narrow Residence in Vietnam

Vietnam-based firm Story Architecture designed this 1,259-square-foot home for a young family in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 7. In the light-filled atrium, a tree with a built-in climbing structure provides a unique indoor playground for the children.  

Photo by Minq Bui

This Modern Courtyard Home Celebrates a 100-Year-Old Tree

Architect Jake Edgley found a former fruit orchard outside of London for his family to plant their own roots. Built around a 100-year-old pear tree, the central courtyard home takes full advantage of its surroundings and fills the home with natural light throughout the day.

Photo by Jack Hobhouse

A Tree Grows Through This Wood-Clad Rental in Los Angeles

The aptly named House in Trees in Los Angeles is strategically placed on a hillside between three large cedars. Architect Simon Storey of Anonymous Architects chose to preserve the massive fourth tree in the center of the site, leaving it in place and incorporating it into the home’s design.

Photo by Steve King

Related Reading: 

20 Nature-Loving Homes Where Biophilia Thrives

16 Unbelievable Tree Houses We’re Pining Over

6 Simple Ways to Boost Your Bathroom With Plant Power

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