S House in China by Jame Design, completed in 2024, reads as a house shaped around light, views, and daily routines. Broad openings frame the city beyond, while warm wood and pale finishes keep the rooms calm and legible. The result is a home that moves easily from gathering to retreat without losing visual connection.
Cabin in Sandefjord is a house in Sandefjord, Norway, by Gudmundur Jonsson Arkitektkontor. Set on a coastal site, it turns decisively toward the water and keeps the view active from both the front and rear of the plan. Glass walls, timber surfaces, and a long dining line shape a calm, open interior.
CLM Residence is a house in São Paulo, Brazil, by Raiz Arquitetura. The project organizes daily life around open rooms, shaded terraces, and wide views, keeping city comfort in step with the surrounding landscape. Inside, the plan shifts from shared areas to quieter private wings with a calm, measured rhythm.
Le Fenil sets a low, assured line across the fields of Québec, Canada, where naturehumaine [architecture+design] grounds a new rural house in former farmland. The single-story retreat uses a barn-inspired volume to choreograph everyday life between panoramic countryside views and sheltered outdoor rooms. Inside, an edited material palette and clear plan organize family routines around a bright central living core that stays closely tied to the open landscape.
Appareil architecture has revamped a wooden home in New York’s Catskill Mountains, transitioning communal areas to the upper level and replacing the cladding with angled panels. Named Chalet Catskills, the project honours the existing home’s structure, while enhancing connectivity with the stunning landscape.