Holiday Home In Iceland Teiknistofan Tr Iceland
Project: Holiday Home in Iceland
Architect: Teiknistofan Tröð
Location: Iceland, Borgarnes
Year: 2024
Area: 99 m2
Photography: Nanne Springer
Architecture in Harmony with Landscape and Climate
In a secluded valley of southwest Iceland, overlooking calm waters and framed by dramatic mountains, the Holiday Home in Iceland by Teiknistofan Tröð emerges as a study in restrained, sensitive architecture. The modest 99 m² volume is composed to read as part of the landscape rather than dominate it. Aligned with the contour lines of the valley, the building lowers itself into the terrain while opening toward sweeping views.
Form, Composition & Site Strategy
The project is articulated through a long, low horizontal volume touched by a perpendicular tower-like element with pitched zinc roof. One wing nests into the slope; the other lifts slightly, framing views toward lake and mountains. The moss-covered flat roof of the primary bar helps the building blur into its terrain, while the vertical larch cladding weathers and integrates over time.
The plan aligns with an internal corridor: living and bedrooms face south toward the panorama; service, storage and technical zones lie to the north. This orientation, combined with terraces and sheltered outdoor zones, enables the building to perform in Iceland’s challenging climate—wind, precipitation and shifting light.
Materiality, Climate Response & Interior Mood
Materials are intentionally raw yet refined. Untreated vertical larch panelling on the exterior ages naturally; expansive glazing opens toward the landscape; interior walls clad in aspen impart warmth and calm. The building uses concrete-tile flooring with underfloor heating to ensure comfort in the Nordic environment. A moss-laden roof emphasizes softness, ecological integration and minimal visual impact.
Sheltered terraces wrap parts of the volume, creating outdoor rooms protected from wind while embracing views. The design’s subtlety—rather than spectacle—makes this home feel quietly rooted in place.
Why This Project Matters
Landscape integration as principle: Instead of forcing form on site, the architecture follows the slope, uses a green roof, and chooses materials that age with weather.
Climate-aware design in minimalist form: The building addresses wind, light and insulation without resorting to overt technology—through orientation, form and material.
Small scale with rich spatial experience: At just 99 m², the project achieves generosity of view, materiality and comfort—proof that well-designed homes need not be large.
Timeless in tone: Through natural wood, stone, moss, glass and wind-forged site, the home promises longevity, not just visual trend.
In the Holiday Home in Iceland, Teiknistofan Tröð has created not a stage set, but a quiet vessel for life—one that invites the occupant to inhabit, rather than observe, the wildness around them.

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Photography © Nanne Springer

Floorplan — © Teiknistofan Tröð

South Elevation — © Teiknistofan Tröð

East Elevation — © Teiknistofan Tröð

West Elevation — © Teiknistofan Tröð

Section 1 — © Teiknistofan Tröð

Section 2 — © Teiknistofan Tröð

Section 3 — © Teiknistofan Tröð
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