15 Skinny Homes That Make the Most of Narrow Lots
While the most common reason to build upward is a compressed lot, some tall and slender houses—otherwise known as skinny homes—are designed to take advantage of impressive views, or to counter sites that are steep or sloping. Here, we’ve rounded up a number of super skinny houses that still manage to feel quite spacious.
An Architect’s Home Squeezes Into a Tiny Lot in Seoul
Architect Minwook Choi’s Seroro House, which means "vertical" in Korean, comprises five compact stories that rise from a 355-square-foot lot in Seoul, South Korea. "The site had been abandoned for a long time," says Minwook of Smaller Architects. "People thought the land was too small to construct anything, and so the price had become reasonable."
Architect Alex Wu built this home on a 20-by-75-foot lot in Atlanta’s Old Fourth Ward neighborhood. First, Wu had to get a variance to increase the house’s allowable size and decrease the setbacks, which ultimately expanded the footprint from a six-foot-wide structure to a 14-foot-wide residence. "From a design perspective, any narrow house is a challenge to make into functional space," the architect says.
Architect TaeByoung Yim designed this 570-square-foot house in Seoul, Korea, for JaeHoon Han, an adjunct professor and retired CFO who sought to build a second home with space for studying and entertaining. "He needed a place where he could focus on his writing and research, but he also wanted an elegant house where friends and family would be able to visit," says the architect.
Jakarta and Bandung–based architecture studio dua worked within a 602-square-foot plot—and a budget of approximately $20,000—to renovate the 4x6x6 House for a young family in Bandung, Indonesia. The house stands out with its boxy white form but still adheres to the neighborhood's two-story height norm. Operable windows of varying sizes give the building a sculptural appearance while also helping to let cooling breezes into the home.
The architects drew inspiration from traditional Hanoi houses with interior courtyards, staggering the floors and ceiling heights across the five-level plan. The volumes are capped with sections of clear roofing that allow light to cascade into the home. "This design provides an unexpected spacious feeling, despite the limited width of the house," explain the architects.
"The clients gave us total freedom in terms of aesthetics, but when it came to practicality, they asked that the top two floors be totally private, so they could rent them," Tùng says. The new, four-story home maintains separation between the two lower floors that make up the family’s 645-square-foot residence and the upper levels, each of which measures 322 square feet.
Architect Aniket Shahane of Office of Architecture renovated the 1,000-square-foot Brooklyn row house where he’d lived for eight years with his wife, jewelry designer Blanca Monros Gomez, to make room for the couple’s two growing children. Having only an 11-foot width to work with, the architect dug out a basement to make way for two additional levels.
Karen White and David MacNaughtan made a new home for themselves and their two sons on a tiny lot in Toronto’s leafy Roncesvalles neighborhood. "I was surprised that these guys had picked out this property," says the house’s designer, Donald Chong. When he first saw the site, it held a ramshackle 800-square-foot cottage, which was the oldest and shakiest building on the street.
With requirements for a three-foot setback on one side of the home and a building code that ruled out windows on the perimeters, Chong conceived a 2,100-square-foot dwelling that takes advantage of the lot. The 32-by-62-foot volume features a series of double-height rooms across three levels—and includes enough room in the backyard for a garden and outdoor dining area.
On an eight-foot-wide site originally occupied by a derelict 1950s cottage in London’s Notting Hill neighborhood, architect Luke Tozer of Pitman Tozer Architects squeezed in a four-story home equipped with rain-water-harvesting and geothermal systems. The majority of the living spaces are situated at the rear of the site, with just a sliver of the facade exposed to the street.
Art advisor and curator Priscilla Caldwell bought this 14-foot-wide townhouse in Brooklyn’s Cobble Hill neighborhood—which had been occupied by the same family for generations—and quickly called upon architect Nate McBride to complete a gut renovation. By moving the existing staircase to the back of the house, the architect created a new layout that makes each floor into its own 14-by-23-foot space. "Think of them as three stacked mini lofts," McBride says.
The kitchen and dining area share the parlor level, where a new, blue core creates added storage and conceals the kitchen appliances. McBride installed herringbone floors to make the space look larger. "Everything we did was to try to make the rooms feel more spacious and open," McBride says. The windows stretch up to the nine-and-a-half-foot ceiling, where the team uncovered the original beams and left them exposed.
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