New folding glass doors connect the downstairs living room to the revamped yard. The floors are concrete and the ceilings are Hemlock.
Living in between the woods
The tree house's floors, walls, ceiling, and built-in furniture are wrapped in wood, connecting the interior to the outdoors.
The owners found this cabin, built in 1959, after looking to fix up a "weird 70s contemporary,
The designer-builders chose white oak in a Cathedral cut, embracing its more rustic quality compared to riff-sawn white oak.
The wood-wrapped tiny home features a deck pierced by a tree trunk.
Popham Design supplied the tiles in the bathrooms, were Gebhardt chose to incorporate more color.
The enormous picture window in the living room frames spectacular views over the water, allowing the family to feel immersed in nature even in the wildest of weather.
The powder room is wrapped in Josef Frank wallpaper.
Dal Tile “Keystones” in Arctic White and Emerald cover the guest bathroom.
Reclaimed wood covers the ceiling in the main room and bedroom. The large white light fixture was reused from the barn’s previous incarnation, and the sectional is from Interior Define.
The interior contrasts the dark exterior with white plaster, allowing natural light to disperse throughout the home.
The tile looks vintage, but was selected and installed as part of the renovation. On the vanity: Kristall Tumbler in Blush by Decor Walther from the Oliver Thom Store.
Zach Batteer and Carlyle Scott designed Field Cabin, a 288-square foot accommodation at Serana, their communal retreat in Paige, Texas. Wrapped in Yakisugi-treated pine, the cabin took 40 days and almost $46K to build.