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Once upon a time, gothic castles, luxury palaces and forest homes dominated the animated skylines. Bad guys resided in dark, greatly secured fortresses, while heroes typically populated captivating lodges, embedded in magic and hope. However what if these characters wished to dwell within our own contemporary world? What type of architecture would change Peter Pan’s treehouse or the Evil Queen’s castle?

Below are seven developed projects reconsider as the homes of the silver screen’s most beloved characters. Due to the fact that behind every renowned character arc, there is an even greater floor plan design.

Bumpers Oast

By ACME, Kent, England, UK

Bumpers Oast_01_architizer Bumpers Oast_01_architizer If Snow White were to trade her home for a modern retreat, Bumpers Oast would be her storybook reimagined in brick and wood. Found in the middle of apple orchards and oast homes, the house is created as a 21st century interpretation of the formal language of Kentish architecture.

Five tower-like structures are built slightly apart from each other, developing a selection of personal, in-between spaces. Your home features a main, triple-height living space, while the exterior reinterprets the conventional façade products (brick and clay-shingled roofing tiles), creating a more contemporary and heavily insulated rainscreen exterior.

Darak Darak

By THE SYSTEM LABORATORY, Seoul, South Korea

Darak Darak_01-architizer Darak Darak_01-architizer
What if the Evil Queen commissioned a home today? What would it look like? Darak is a contemporary home, reminiscent of gothic architecture, made of concrete, steel and glass– the perfect home for a queen who chooses intimidation over invitation. The areas partly overlap, developing playful, vertical blood circulation paths throughout the building. On the other hand, the structure’s main façade is totally open, while the remaining volume is curtained by a dark roofing pierced with little, irregular apertures, subtly enabling light to enter the interior.

PAN-tretopphytter (PAN treetop-cabins)

By sivilarkitekt espen surnevik as Pan Hytter, Åsnes, Innlandet, Norway

Jury Winner, Architecture +Metal, 11th Architizer A+A wards

PAN-tretopphytter (PAN treetop-cabins)_01-architizer PAN-tretopphytter (PAN treetop-cabins)_02-architizer PAN-tretopphytter(pun not intended) seems like the only address Peter Pan would ever consent to populate. Customized to fit the specific topography, a series of steel legs raises a triangular-shaped cabin high above the forest floor. The interior layout follows a simple, open-plan logic that consists of the basic living facilities and is made generally out of pine wood. Lastly, the outside skin is consisted of black oxidized zinc and black steel for appropriate insulation.

The Periphery

By Locus.studio, Boulder, Utah

The Periphery_01_architizer The Periphery_01_architizer Embedded within the desert terrain, your house’s austere linear geometry evokes a singular modern temple– the best retreat for Hercules after finally completing his twelve labours. The residence rises above slickrock and wetlands at 6,300 feet, checking out the threshold between habitation and exposure.

Strategic material selection, in addition to the level of craft needed to complete the task, showcases a thoughtful action to the instant context, environment and cinematic surroundings. Specifically, oak, steel, and concrete form the project’s primary palette, while comprehensive millwork and charming woodworking elevate your house to an object of “handcrafted modernism.”

Shell House/ The language of the forest

By Tono Mirai designers, Japan

Jury Winner, Personal Home (S Carefully ingrained within its landscape, Shell House catches the environmental level of sensitivity befitting Pocahontas– discreet adequate that even someone like John Smith may miss it completely. The small earth house is made from regional wood, clay and conventional strategies that aim to attain a high ecological efficiency. The organic volume is supported by seven exposed wooden beams, while the interior walls are completed with rammed earth and regional wood species. Created with passive heating in mind, the building’s roofing and outside cladding work in tandem to manage temperature level, optimizing solar gain and lessening heat loss.

Vault House By Johnston Marklee, Oxnard, California

With its sculptural curves and distance to the Pacific,Vault House_01_architizer Vault House_01_architizerVault House feels like a terrestrial development of the underwater world Ariel left behind. The design difficulties of the traditional single-view typology beach house, developing an assembly of stacked and unidirectional vaulted rooms within a simple rectilinear volume, extending the oceanfront view. The rooms are differentiated by means of a range of product surfaces and volumes, every one assigned

to a various interior function. Moreover, tailor-made elements turn your house into a dynamic “entity,”frequently serving as a shutter throughout the day and filtering the surrounding landscape, light and instant views. CASA MYM By Numero 26 Studio, Murcia, Spain Organized around light, shadow, and inward-facing courtyards, CASA MYM unfolds like an architectural play ground for a character who made an art form out of navigating tight corners and hidden passages– Aladdin. Drawing from the culture of Spanish traditional homes, usually discovered in orchards, the building is developed through a modern code that values spontaneity, versatile materiality and regional identity.

The house is divided into 3 separate squares, every one booked for a different spatial activity. The positioning of each square develops a series of nooks and thresholds, developing a spirited shift throughout the area. Finally, the material palette is colourful and local, made from ceramic tiles, reeds and wood, imbuing the residence with a high level of tactile richness.

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Included Image: Bumpers Oast by ACME, Kent, England, United Kingdom

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