In Cambridge, a Plywood-Clad Home With a Twist Asks $850K
Uni Architecture rotated XS House’s three volumes to allow for triangular skylights.
Uni Architecture rotated XS House’s three volumes to allow for triangular skylights.
If you’re in the market for a new home in Cambridge, Massachusetts, consider how this recently listed condo stacks up against other prospects. For starters, it’s unlike any other property around, and the floor plan manages to squeeze four levels into 1,200 square feet. But the twisting shape is more than just for show: A total of eight triangular skylights in each rotated corner work to flood the interior with natural light.
Built in 2006, the home was designed by Uni Architecture, a multidisciplinary firm founded by architects Chaewon Kim and Beat Schenk. The duo—who also acted as the developers and designed three other structures on the same double lot—named this particular unit the XS House, as it’s the smallest of the four homes.
In our 2009 interview, Kim and Schenk describe their challenges finding an affordable home in Cambridge and experience renovating a gable-roofed, 19th-century home that sit nexts door to the XS House.
See the full story on Dwell.com: In Cambridge, a Plywood-Clad Home With a Twist Asks $850K