Warsaw, on the outskirts of the wood of Poland, one type of residence comes out of trees-a modern house designed as a refuge and a tangible collection of owners’ lifelong visits. The Sadowski House, created by Architects Vosecich Kotki Of BBGK Architeki And Katarzina machContemporary Polish is more than a piece of architecture; It is a deep personal project of travel, memory and desire to stay close to nature.
Customers, a couple of experienced passengers imagined a house, which would not only serve as a place to live, but will also serve as a showroom for their experiences. After detecting deserts, polar regions and remote scenario around the world, they wanted a house that could catch their memories and demonstrate their collection of artifacts collected on the way. This desire directed the architects towards designing a residence, which balances privacy with openness, which reflects the courageous spirit of the couple and their need for a peaceful return.
Designs are traditional nomadic shelters such as Tipis, Urtes, and Iglos – simple yet flexible structures, where communal life thrives under a shared roof. The architects revived this concept in a modern form: a single -storey house was wrapped by a huge tent -like roof, which organizes all living areas at the ground level. The result is a house where residents are constantly connected, both from each other and from the surrounding forest.
Set within a pine grove, the Sadowski House is designed to blur the line between the indoors and outside. The floor-to-seasin window, a 72-foot-long slipping window, and strategically laid courtyards allowed nature to flow into the interiors. It has a central atrium garden with a withdrawal glass roof in its heart, which enables residents to experience changing weather from inside their home. When opened, the roof and sliding walls allow natural ventilation, which carry the forest sounds, scents, and winds – a modern interpretation of how traditional shelters exploited their environment.
Working with interior architects Monica and Adam Bronchovsky, Hola designAnd landscape architect Marta TomiaqThe owners of the house played an active role in shaping every detail. Warm, natural materials such as wood, stone, terracotta and ceramic create a periodic environment, while foreign plants within the atrium affect the spirit of tropical modernism. A characteristic walls are the use of quartzite, a rare stone from Switzerland, discovered by owners on their visit.
Inside, the house doubles as a gallery of individual stories. The artifacts, sculptures and pictures collected during the years of exploration are displayed throughout the interiors, reconciliation with each. A grand piano anchors the living space, highlighting the importance of music and culture within the daily life of the family.
There is even an indoor swimming pool that frames internal atrium scenes while offering a glimpse of the forest through low-set windows embedded in the stone wall. Whether it is floating in the water or resting on the edge of the pool, the owners are connected to the garden both the center of the house and ahead of Woodland.
For more information about Sadowski House and BBGK Architekci, travel bbgk.pl,
It is mentioned as photography.