


Treehotel, Sweden
Situated approximately 60 km south of the Arctic Circle, the Treehotel is a series of breathtaking tree houses, perched high in the Boreal forest.
(via observedintoexistence)
For over 13 years, architect Mickey Muennig (and girlfriend and children) lived in the tiny Greenhouse—his 1976 take on the then-popular dome and his celestial artistic response. From the deck of the outdoor bath, you can see up the coast.
Inside the one-room house, the reclaimed-redwood platform bed hangs on slender steel rods fastened to the ceiling. The ceiling cap is a vent—the house’s thermostat.
(via observedintoexistence)
(via hybrid-machine)
“The King of the Frogs” Tree House by Baumraum (via inthralled)
Eco Perch — wooden house, designed by Studio Blue Forest.
I would like to live here.
Kalkin’s Shipping Container Homes
There are countless benefits to using shipping containers in architectural design. For starters, there are loads of them, they are easily transportable, you can stack them on top of one another, they are extremely durable, and they are quite cheap (you could pick up a used container for under $1000). Besides all this, shipping containers are also green. The only thing better than great design is great design using recycled materials.
New Jersey based Architect Adam Kalkin has earned the reputation of employing shipping containers in very inventive ways. He has used containers to design anything from luxurious homes to refugee housing. Kalkin designed, built, and lives in the beautiful shipping container home featured above. (via)