Delta Shelter / Olson Kundig Architects (PHOTOS)

2012-02-16-archdailyreal.jpg  |  By   |  Posted: 03/16/2012 10:32 am Updated: 03/16/2012 10:32 am

By Victoria King
(click here for original article)

2012-03-16-delta1.jpg
Copyright Olson Kundig Architects & Tim Bies
2012-03-16-delta2.jpg
Copyright Benjamin Benschneider

Delta Shelter – a 1,000 square-foot cabin – is essentially a steel-clad box on stilts that can be completely shuttered when the owner is away. The 200 square-foot footprint of the house rises above a 40-acre, 100-year flood plain adjacent to the Methow River. The verticality, coloring and raw nature of the materials used for construction directly respond to the wildness of the setting. The owner sought a compact, easy to maintain, virtually indestructible building to house himself and his friends for fun and adventure in the mountains. With an exterior of steel, the house is virtually indestructible.

2012-03-16-delta3.jpg
Copyright Benjamin Benschneider

The cabin is composed of three levels: the lowest level is half carport, half utility/storage room; the middle level consists of the entry, two small bedrooms and bathrooms; the top level is one large space which includes living, dining and cooking areas. Cantilevered steel decks extend from the top and middle levels and provide space for outdoor sleeping and entertaining.

2012-03-16-delta4.jpg
Copyright Benjamin Benschneider

The cabin is supported by four steel columns. Floors are 3ā€ x 6ā€ tongue-and-groove wood car-decking, and exterior wood infill walls are clad in 16-gauge, hot-rolled steel sheets with exposed steel fasteners. Most of the structure, including the steel structure, roof panels, shutters, and stairs, was prefabricated off-site, thereby reducing on-site waste and site disruption.

2012-03-16-delta5.jpg
Copyright Benjamin Benschneider

Due to prefabrication and the use of plywood for all interior surfaces, typical construction wastage was kept to a minimum. Aside from building as small a structure as possible and limiting the impact on the landscape, Delta Shelter’s most unique sustainable strategy was to be able to open the structure to the environment and to use human power as the means to do it.

2012-03-16-delta6.jpg
axiometric

All four shutters, which measure 10’ x 18’, can be opened and closed simultaneously by using a hand wheel that moves the shutters over the glazed portions of each faƧade. The shutters are operated by a series of mechanical devices including a hand wheel, drive shafts, u-joints, spur gears and cables. All windows are operable. No air conditioning is included in the project.

Architects: Olson Kundig Architects
Location: Mazama, Washington, USA
Project Team: Tom Kundig, FAIA – design principal; Ellen Cecil – project manager; Debbie Kennedy – interior designer
Contractor: Tim Tanner
Consultants: Monte Clark Engineering – structural engineering; Turner Exhibits – shutter engineer and fabricator
Size: 1,000 sqm
Photographs: Olson Kundig Architects / Tim Bies, Benjamin Benschneider

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By Victoria King (click here for original article) Copyright Olson Kundig Architects & Tim Bies ...
By Victoria King (click here for original article) Copyright Olson Kundig Architects & Tim Bies ...
 
 
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left in vermont
go ahead. tread on them.
08:37 PM on 03/24/2012
Kundig does beautiful work.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eleni aus
05:50 PM on 03/19/2012
Wow! 2 beds and bthrm in middle floor, din/kit/lnge up top - 10 squares
and it shuts up shop
- steel clad timber sounds great as does the ability to close up and therefore ione would assume protect the windows from ehat and teh interior from ember attack:
in Australia, our prime concern is fire - houses near planations and in naturally forested valley areas are particularly vulnerable :
Would flooring and eave section withstand 'normal' fires (if not catastrophic ones)? Or would they prove to be the weakspots re fire,
But so enjoyed looking at this concept - and it physically exists - not just a 'plan' ... there is such a need for great planning for smaller dwellings and reduced footprint homes.
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studioh!
bridging the snarchasm
05:22 PM on 03/17/2012
these guys do beautiful work.
12:00 AM on 03/17/2012
A side from the roof being flat (bad idea for snow loads).... I'd like one - whats's the building costs ? I'm sure there is a roof re-design for snow country. Heat rises so the vertical design works well.

The Danester
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left in vermont
go ahead. tread on them.
08:36 PM on 03/24/2012
Flat roofs work fine. They're used all the time here. The snow adds additional insulation.
08:59 PM on 04/05/2012
Flat roofs do work fine for a while...but eventually leaks will occur. Mother nature always wins in the end. Why design a future maintenance headache.
09:06 PM on 03/16/2012
A flat roof in a snowy climate. Smart!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chicgogo
One Nation under Mad,,,ness
11:17 PM on 03/19/2012
Just like the thousands here in Chicago.
09:18 PM on 04/05/2012
that all require maintenance
05:37 PM on 03/16/2012
Survivalist chic.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pab08
Partisan agendas can't compete with objective fact
05:23 PM on 03/16/2012
Interesting how the cost is not mentioned. I wonder how much of a premium you have to pay for such a simple building.
09:25 PM on 04/05/2012
Just about everything can be prefabricated and there doesn't seem to be expensive finishes (where a good deal of the budget gets spent). Aside from the shutters mechanical devices which are very cool, the building actually looks relatively cheap to build.
04:40 PM on 03/16/2012
But even with energy saving windows there's still a lot of steel and glass in that place and not much insulation. Good luck keep that place heated in the winter. And dude, that fireplace is tiny! Looks good on the cover of a magazine, but there's a reason houses in cold regions don't look that way.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
04:28 PM on 03/16/2012
Very cool.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
02:09 PM on 03/16/2012
Wow - he designed the thing to both heat and illuminate the outside world!
How do the building materials "directly respond" to the "wilderness" again?
04:41 PM on 03/16/2012
That's fancy architect speak.
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Natalie Y
Chicago, my kind of town..
02:04 PM on 03/16/2012
This is fantastic! Just so amazing, and creative. Truly remarkable, I'm flabbergasted, and a tad bit jealous I don't own it.
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PlutocratsSuck
Godless heathen liberal...and loving it.
01:36 PM on 03/16/2012
Neato!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jessica Ann Stallings
Alternative designer. Screw the norm.
01:29 PM on 03/16/2012
Perfect for the zombie invasion.
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jrb35
They are completely ignorant of space-war tactics.
04:30 PM on 03/16/2012
That was my first though when I saw the pictures.
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jrb35
They are completely ignorant of space-war tactics.
05:09 PM on 03/17/2012
first THOUGHT
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PlutocratsSuck
Godless heathen liberal...and loving it.
05:29 PM on 03/16/2012
Now that you mention it, that balcony is perfect for dumping boiling oil on zombies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MRstoner2udude
I'm a human being? What about you?
12:37 PM on 03/16/2012
Very cool. This vertical cabin domain must be a trend. Right off of 670 in dt Cbus, there is a vertical, small cabin. It's built on a small patch of land, very small. The views will be awesome.
12:16 PM on 03/16/2012
A hermit's paradise.