
Set in a serene surroundings on the shore of New Zealand’s Coromandel Peninsula, this modern day hut is a modest and basic vacation retreat. Easy to take away from this coastal erosion zone, the contemporary hut named Whangapoua was constructed on two thick wooden sleds that can be loaded on a barge and moved. Created by Crosson Clarke Carnachan, which you may well remember constructed the Rahimoana Villa, this 48,eight square meters vacation seaside hut encompasses all the necessary amenities for a family members of five. Entering by way of a double-height set of glass doors from the beach deck, the living/dining/kitchen zone continues in the back with a bathroom and a 3 tiered bunk children room. Upstairs, a mezzanine bed room for the mother and father opens in direction of enchanting stretches of water. Displaying a Monterey Cypress (Macrocarpa) cladded facade and sides, the hut’s rear was clad in a cheap, conventional constructing materials known as “flat sheet”, merging recognizable resources in a movable display of modern-day architecture.


















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