
The Netherlands has mastered the art of the catalogue home, a residential model where architectural types are as standardized as automobile makes. Buyers browse familiar options, and the barnhouse, with its sweeping gable roof and prominent timber structure, consistently tops the list. It promises the romance of rural living packaged for suburban plots. But what happens when site conditions refuse to cooperate with this template?
In Werkhoven, RV Architecture proved that starting with a recognizable type need not end with a predictable house. The architects faced a triangular plot that defied conventional positioning, so they embraced the irregularity. The barnhouse angles across its lot, turning its glazed facades toward an expansive backyard rather than the street. Inside, the soaring gable height floods the open plan with daylight, while three sculptural wooden columns support the roof and frame carefully composed views. A curved wall conceals service spaces and guides movement from entry to kitchen. Standard catalogue, custom execution.
Designers: Ruud Visser and Fumi Hoshino

Most architects would look at that triangular plot and either complain about constraints or try to force a rectangular box onto it anyway. Ruud Visser and Fumi Hoshino did the opposite. They rotated the entire house to prioritize the view, which sounds simple until you realize how rare that move actually is in suburban contexts. The front of most houses faces the street because that’s what we do. Convention masquerading as inevitability. This project says forget the street, the good stuff is in the back, and commits fully to that logic with floor-to-ceiling glazing on three sides.


Four primary wooden beams sit on top of the side walls and the internal walls between bedrooms. Smaller purlins span between these beams to stiffen the roof plane. Standard timber frame logic so far. Then in the open living area, where you can’t have walls interrupting the space, three angled wooden columns rise up to support the roof structure. These aren’t decorative. They’re load-bearing elements positioned specifically to frame views while maintaining structural integrity. The angle aligns with the roof pitch and creates a visual rhythm that reinforces the gable geometry. You can see exactly how the building stands up, which is increasingly rare in residential work where structure usually hides behind drywall.


That curved wooden wall running from entrance to kitchen conceals the laundry room, toilet, cloakroom, and storage. All the unglamorous necessities that usually get shoved into awkward corners or announced with clunky door frames. Instead, this single sculptural gesture handles circulation and service spaces while adding warmth to what could otherwise read as a cold modernist box. Vertical wood cladding wrapping around itself, creating both physical separation and spatial continuity. You move through the house following this element, which is exactly what good circulation design should do without announcing itself. It’s the kind of detail that separates competent projects from memorable ones.


Dark roof tiles, white horizontal wood siding, natural timber for structural elements, polished concrete floors, and glass. That’s essentially the entire material vocabulary. This kind of limitation forces clarity because every element has to justify its presence. There’s nowhere to hide behind decorative excess. The concrete floors make practical sense for Dutch climate conditions too. Thermal mass for passive heating, durability for high-traffic areas, and a neutral base that lets the wood structure read clearly against it. Material choices that work on multiple levels simultaneously, which is always a sign that someone actually thought through the consequences of their decisions.

Catalogue barnhouses typically give you a recognizable formal language that buyers and builders understand, which has real value when you’re trying to get something built and financed. Visser and Hoshino used that familiarity as permission to experiment with everything else: siting, structure, circulation, materiality. The result reads as both familiar and unexpected, which is a difficult balance to strike. You recognize it as a barnhouse immediately, but the spatial experience inside bears little resemblance to the typical catalogue version with its subdivided rooms and predictable layouts. Standardized building types can serve as starting points rather than endpoints, and this project proves it without being precious about the concept.
The post This Dutch Barnhouse Breaks Every Suburban Design Rule on Purpose first appeared on Yanko Design.




















