Designed to be a 24-hour building, the house is an office for Souter’s building company during the day and at night it can be turned into a home to sleep in.
In the living space, joinery made of Paperock, a fully recyclable paper-based cellulose material, houses the TV and contains a cleverly concealed office space behind two sets of pocket doors.
The surface is finished in a forest green laminate, bringing a bit of the green from the outside in and is carried through into the kitchen cabinets. A custom daybed made from leftover flooring from the build can be turned into a second bed.
The main bedroom, which is accessed through a custom OSB sliding door that seamlessly slides into a pocket in the living room wall, contains two more workspaces, one concealed behind bi-fold pocket doors in the joinery and the other a secret hidden floating shelf underneath the Murphy bed.
Images by Barton Taylor