In Norway, owning a cabin isn’t a trend or a luxury; it’s practically an essential part of the culture. Stemming from the German word Hütte, meaning hut, a traditional Norwegian hytte is a small, utilitarian, and often prefabricated cottage where nature takes center stage. When Scott and Christine Young moved with their two children from Houston to Oslo for work, they decided to put down roots in Norway, and asked their friends Casper and Lexie Mork-Ulnes of Mork-Ulnes Architects—a 2015 Design Vanguard firm based in San Francisco and Oslo—to design a second home. They wanted an outdoorsy yet comfortable retreat, close to the hiking, biking, and fishing spots that they enjoy.
For a site overlooking Mylla Lake, just over an hour north of Oslo, the architects designed a two-bedroom, 940-square-foot cabin. It is clad in untreated heart pine planks and deviates from the single-gable roof typical of hyttes. Four connected volumes, each with a steeply sloped roof representing one half of a gable, pinwheel out from the house’s center. The structure’s plan allows for two protected porch areas that face the rising or setting sun and creates unique views of the lake, forest, hillside, or sky from each room. The striking roof angles differentiate the cabin from its neighbors and allow natural light from generous windows to spread throughout the interior. They also serve the utilitarian purpose of funneling snow away from the porches. “Here in snow country, you have to be careful where the snow sheds,” says Casper, a native Norwegian. “You don’t want it to land on your head.”
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