Project posted by CAST architecture

McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes

Location
Year
2021
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, winter exterior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, interior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, interior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, interior
McCarthyRekart Tiny Homes, interior
Tiny Homes construction
Tiny Homes construction

Details

Square Feet
144

Credits

Photographer
Benjamin Drummond

From CAST architecture

Like some who found themselves in lockdown at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, this Seattle family of four realized if they were going to work and attend school online, they could do it from anywhere. Cue a temporary move to their summer place, a funky one-bedroom cabin on the Chewuch River in northeast Washington. A year into their stay, they decided they were putting down roots in the Methow Valley and, as a family, decided to make the change permanent.

While a single-room cabin was fun for short vacations, it was far from ideal as a long-term residence. In late winter 2021, they set a goal of creating individual bedrooms for their two teenagers by the start of the next school year. Permitting and building an addition was going to be a multi-year process. Their out-of-the-box solution? The family spent the summer building a pair of tiny homes on trailers with the help of friends and local tradespeople.

CAST’s goal was simple: apply everything we’ve learned about efficient home planning to a design that would be buildable by non-professionals and legal to tow down the highway. This was a highly collaborative process as we sought a compromise between homeowner Neil’s research into solutions pioneered by the DIY tiny-house community and our knowledge of modern construction best practices.

The result is a pair of elegant, flexible rooms-on-wheels clad in shou sugi ban charred-wood siding that are modern, warm, and ultra-functional. The simple pitched roof is matched by an outward tilting wall to create a playful form with extra headroom at one end for a sleeping loft (with a built-in desk below). A narrow service bar in the center accommodates a small kitchen and a private compartment for a composting toilet. The regular rhythm of high square windows makes the room feel much larger by illuminating the ceiling. At the entry side, floor-to-ceiling glass frames a wood stove, creating a cozy lounge space.