This House Makes Climbing Between Rooms the Main Attraction - Yanko Design
Briefly

This House Makes Climbing Between Rooms the Main Attraction - Yanko Design
"The typical vacation rental is a cabin or beach house sitting on the ground with a yard, a deck, maybe a hot tub, and a hammock scattered around it. Those amenities are usually background, things you walk past on the way to the main house or visit once during the stay. Michael Jantzen's Elevated Leisure Habitat flips that logic by pulling everything off the ground and turning circulation into the main event,"
"The central house is a compact volume with sleeping space, a desk, a toilet, a shower, and a small food-preparation area. Around it, the elevated amenities include a garden, a hot tub, a picnic pavilion, a porch-swing pavilion, a hammock platform, and a solar-cell array for electricity. All sit on their own stilts at different heights, connected to the house and to each other by a network of stairs, two of which descend to the ground."
The Elevated Leisure Habitat is a compact, two-person rental organized around a small central house with sleeping, desk, shower, toilet, and minimal food-preparation facilities. Surrounding the house are individual elevated platforms on stilts, each dedicated to a single leisure activity: garden, hot tub, picnic pavilion, porch-swing pavilion, hammock, and a solar-cell array. Platforms occupy varied heights and are linked by a network of stairs and landings, with two stairways descending to the ground. Archetypal pitched forms and conventional domestic symbols shape the aesthetic, and elevating amenities makes movement between spaces the primary experience.
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