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Designed by archi­tects for travel enthu­siasts: Our curated coll­ection of out­standing holiday acco­mo­da­tions — also via map. Do you already know our new entry?

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Recharge House: Building & living with ever-present views of nature

In August 2018 the Danish Recharge House - project started, driven by a strong vision. The making of in pictures.

by Britta Krämer in October 2019

This is an article from our archive. It was published in October 2019, so some details may no longer be up to date.

 Recharge House: Bauen & Wohnen mit der all­ge­gen­wär­tigen Sicht in die Natur in  /

A little further south of the village Agger on the Danish North Sea coast, the Recharge House by architect Søren Sarup looks out over the water of the “Flat Lake” . The house is located right on the edge of Thy National Park and is sur­rounded by a stunning land­scape that is home to a great number of wildlife, espe­cially birds.

The North Sea is located less than 600 meters west of the house. This par­ti­cular stretch of the Danish West­coast is home to some of the best local surf spots and is called the­r­efore Cold Hawaii.

Søren Sarup: Surfing architect © Tina Ste­phansen

In August 2018 the Recharge House — project started, driven by the strong vision of the owners Anders Petersen and Rasmus Johnsen and the architect: Building and living with the ever-present views of nature. They were assisted by a little group of skilled building pro­fes­sionals. On the house’s website, the owners of the Recharge House show an impressive inventory of the material that has been used during the building process:

140 square meters of cedar shingles.
44100 nails and screws.
2738.07 kilos of windows.
1123.20 meters of decking.
672.28 square meters of insu­lation.
158.27 square meters of plywood.
294.53 square meters of fiber-plaster.

And they emphazise: “Ever­y­thing you see we have thought about. With our bare hands, we have gripped, struc­tured, fitted, wrapped, rounded, and shaped the expe­rience. Under all weather con­di­tions, night and day, weekends and weekdays, we have been there. We can honestly say that we have done what we could to create a space that will affirm your humanity.”

Recharge House: The making of in pic­tures.

Daniel Knudsen © Mette Johnsen
Hans Bardram © Mette Johnsen
The crew © Mette Johnsen
Architect Søren Sarup © Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
Owners Anders Petersen & Rasmus Johnsen © Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
© Mette Johnsen
Anders Petersen © Mette Johnsen
Rasmus Johnsen © Mette Johnsen
June 2019 Ready! © Mette Johnsen
© Christian Brand­staetter

The house con­sists of the main house and an annex. The sur­rounding ter­races connect the two buil­dings and offer shel­tered seating almost no matter which direction the wind is coming from.

The shape and ori­en­tation of the Recharge House are inspired by the fea­tures of the pro­perty and the desire to create a seamless con­nection between the indoor space and the sur­rounding nature. The archi­tecture has a special emphasis on how the clo­seness to water, wind, open sky and natural light can bring peace and harmony to the mind.

© Christian Brand­staetter
© Christian Brand­staetter
© Christian Brand­staetter
© Mette Johnsen
© Christian Brand­staetter
© Christian Brand­staetter

The architect: Søren Sarup (born 1975) lives in Aarhus and Agger. The inde­pendent Danish architect works pro­fes­sio­nally in the planning and design of all building types, from sum­mer­houses to multi-story buil­dings. His past work has focussed mainly on pro­jects in Denmark, recently he started to cross the boarders and for col­la­bo­ra­tions on inter­na­tional scale.

“The land­scape and the natural phe­nomena such as light, rain, sun, wind, snow, moon, stars, animals and plants always have an important role in the houses I create. There is always an inte­resting view. The open floor plan is an expression of an open mind. An open mind relaxes and rarely wants to defend itself. Relating to “what is?”, and the­r­efore accepting rather than con­trolling, causes many generous expe­ri­ences that otherwise would be dif­ficult to per­ceive. The open floor plan is a kind of “Let it go” approach in order to make a lot of unique expe­ri­ences come into the phy­sical space.”

© Christian Brand­staetter
© Christian Brand­staetter
© Christian Brand­staetter

Text: Britta Krämer, October 2019

Overview: Here you can find all our HomeS­tories at a glance! If you want to stay up to date, you can opt-in for our Home­Story-News­letter here.

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