A Home Built to Blend into the Environment

1 MIN READ

Architects commonly utilize biomimicry when designing homes in rural areas to seamlessly blend a building with nature around them. Taking camouflage techniques a significant step beyond mimicry, architects in Poland have designed a house that will blend into a forest setting using mirrors.

The project, dubbed Izabelin House, will be a structure that appears suspended in mid-air. Mirrors will make up the first-story exterior, creating the illusion that it is an untouched forested area. The house is a total 4,305 square-feet (400 sq m), but only a small piece of it will be readily visible. It will take about a year to build on a $1 million budget.

The architects are addressing the possibility of birds flying into the facade two ways. The surface of the second-story will not be reflective, and a sounding device on the lower level will warn birds if they get too close to the reflective surface. This is a measure that could limit bird fatalities in cities, where large, glassy facades are even more common.

Read more about Izabelin House from Jetson Green.

About the Author

Katie Gloede

Katie Gloede is on the Radar Desk Data Studio team working with Metrostudy to integrate housing data across the Hanley Wood brands. 

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