On the Coast of Sweden, a Family Getaway Riffs on Traditional Fishing Cottages
Radar Arkitektur builds a modest cabin that synchs with its site and lives larger than its square footage.
Bohuslän, a province on the west coast of Sweden, is home to more than 8,000 islands, and it’s celebrated for its quintessential fishing villages and spectacular natural beauty—including the smooth rock formations that define its shoreline.
It’s here that Helena Brunskog and Thomas Antonsen decided to build a holiday cottage to accommodate their family of five, as well as relatives and friends. To bring their vision to life, Helena approached her longtime friend, architect and owner of Radar architecture, Susanna Ringnér.
The couple, who have three children and a dog, had previously owned a typical Swedish cottage in the region that they bought 18 years ago when their first child was born.
"It was important to have a place to spend time in my home country with my children," says Helena. "We had some really happy years in our first cottage, but we weren’t completely satisfied with the location on a busy road, or the fact that the sun disappeared behind the forest early in the evening." So, they commissioned Ringnér to create a new holiday home—on a site just a few miles away—that would better suit their lifestyle.
The brief for the new cottage was simple: it needed to embrace the surrounding natural beauty, sit gently on the existing landscape, comply with Sweden’s strict building regulations for holiday homes, and be able to host large gatherings of friends and family.
See the full story on Dwell.com: On the Coast of Sweden, a Family Getaway Riffs on Traditional Fishing Cottages
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