18-07 Holiday Home by OFFICE INAINN: A Hillside Retreat That Builds With the Land, Not On It18-07 Holiday Home by OFFICE INAINN: A Hillside Retreat That Builds With the Land, Not On It

18-07 Holiday Home by OFFICE INAINN: A Hillside Retreat That Builds With the Land, Not On It

UNI Editorial
UNI Editorial published Story under Architecture, Residential Building on

Perched high above a dramatic fjord on Norway’s western coast, the 18-07 Holiday Home by OFFICE INAINN is a remarkable example of architecture shaped entirely by its landscape. Completed in 2025, the 127 m² residence embraces the region’s rugged terrain, steep rocky slopes, and shifting coastal light—resulting in a home that feels as though it naturally emerged from the hillside itself.

Designed in close collaboration with a client deeply connected to the site, the project champions a simple yet powerful idea: let the landscape lead every architectural decision.

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A Home That Preserves the Land’s Natural Character

Rather than leveling the terrain, the architects chose to adapt to it—a strategy that defined the entire project. The home consists of two subtly offset volumes that follow the slope’s existing geometry. This move:

  • Preserves the rocky natural topography
  • Creates intuitive spatial separations
  • Generates dynamic ceiling heights
  • Reduces the need for internal partition walls

Rooms flow organically from one elevation to another, allowing the home to feel grown from the land rather than constructed on top of it.

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A Journey Between Rock, Timber, and Light

The approach to the home is intentionally choreographed. Visitors move along a narrow path that threads between exposed bedrock and the building’s facade—drawing them into the landscape before leading inside.

A tall, linear corridor extends this movement indoors. Here, timber walls filter daylight in warm coastal hues, enhancing the sensory transition from raw nature to crafted interior. Eventually, the corridor unfolds toward the dramatic fjord view. Each room frames the landscape differently, shaped by the terrain and oriented toward distinctive sightlines—trees, rock outcrops, or the shifting horizon.

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Materiality Rooted in Place

The architects selected materials that feel inherently native to the site. Locally sourced woods, muted tones, tactile finishes, and minimal detailing allow nature’s presence to dominate. The intention was never to compete with the landscape but to continue its textures and colors indoors.

As architect Maksymilian notes: “We didn’t want to add to the landscape—we wanted to continue it.”

This philosophy guides the home’s atmosphere, where every surface and structural element quietly supports the surrounding environment.

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A Project Defined by Collaboration and Respect for Nature

The holiday home reflects a deep collaboration between OFFICE INAINN and the client, whose relationship to the region shaped the project’s respectful approach. From structural decisions to material choices, the guiding principle remained constant: nature leads, architecture follows.

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All photographs are works of ONI Studio

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