This Charming Wooden Barn in the Netherlands Utilizes Every Part of the Tree

Century-old oak trees are fused with modern-day materials to create a barn rooted in the past that serves the present.

Published by

Netherlands-based architects Annemariken Hilberink and Geert Bosch had to cut down seven 100-year-old oak trees on the estate where they live and work, just outside the city of ’s-Hertogenbosch. Rather than selling the trees for paper, they decided to mill them and build a new barn. The new structure makes extraordinarily efficient use of the milled lumber, and it draws inspiration from the historic farmhouses of the area.

Annemariken and Geert sourced old oak trees from their estate to build a barn that provides space for storage, working, and a car port.

René de Wit

The architects used smaller bits of oak as wooden shingles for the roof.

René de Wit

Get the Dwell Newsletter

Be the first to see our latest home tours, design news, and more.

Subscribe

"Traditionally, most farmhouses in the Meierij of ’s-Hertogenbosch have their separate parts—such as living quarters, storage space, and cowsheds—integrated into a single building," according to Annemariken and Geert. "Over time, however, these compact buildings frequently became too cramped to house all of these functions, so a separate barn was added."

The strong structural members and facade planks are made from tree trunks.

René de Wit

The asymmetrical roof has a steep side and a low pitched side.

René de Wit

"By replacing a collage of obsolete shelters and sheds, we would, in line with our farm’s monumental character, build a new barn with locally harvested materials employing traditional techniques," say Annemariken and Geert.

The oak trees were cut down using a mobile sawmill, and the strong trunks were used for the structural frame of the barn and roof, and the planks of the facade. The remaining tree parts were used for other aspects of the barn. 

In the 1,300-square-foot barn, 400 square feet serve as a workspace for the architects’ firm.

René de Wit

A Deklein & Vanhoff wood stove keeps the workspace toasty during the Netherlands’ cold winters.

René de Wit

The architects mixed concrete and bark to create a textured, organic-looking surface for the exterior walls on each end of the structure. This composite material makes the barn blend in with its forested surroundings.

They also used small pieces of wood from the trees as roof shingles. "The roughness of this cleaved timber ensures that this untreated roofing will last for decades," say Annemariken and Geert. The leftover tree material was chopped up and set aside to be used as firewood.

A 200-square-foot loft above the storage room overlooks the workspace.

René de Wit

A minimal palette of materials—oak, concrete and glass—allows the unique design of the barn to shine.

René de Wit

The 1,300-square-foot barn is split into three areas: a carport, a storage room, and an office with a workshop and meeting area. A loft above the storage room opens to the workshop. 

Wood’s organic nature led to the barn’s beautiful imperfections—from the board-formed concrete volumes to the rough-hewn planks, some of which are marked by barbed wire and shrapnel dating back to the 1940s. "The barn’s aesthetics have been strongly influenced by coincidence," say Annemariken and Geert.

The barn makes extraordinarily efficient use of timber milled from on-site trees.

René de Wit

Bark gives the exterior walls a  textured appearance and allows them to blend into the forested surroundings.

René de Wit

Related Reading:

These 10 Refreshed Barns Bring Modern Living to the Countryside

This Barn-Like Oasis Nails Rustic Modern Living

Project Credits:

Architect of Record: Hilberink & Bosch Architects

Builder/General Contractor: Zandenbouw

Structural Engineer: Raadgevend Ingenieursburo van Nunen

Landscape Design: Parklaan Landschapsarchitecten

Lighting Design: Peter van Kempen Lichtarchitect

Mobile Sawmill: Brabanthout

Woodstove: Deklein & Vanhoff

Published

LikeComment

Cabins