this artist studio by cabinet embraces its garden context 

 

Nestled in a private garden in Conches, Geneva, this artist studio by Cabinet architects unfolds as a snug and curved volume embracing its picturesque setting. Throughout the year, the shed-inspired wooden refuge interacts with the movement of light and the region’s seasonal rhythms, themes intrinsically related to the artist’s work.

 

The new studio is thought of as a garden gallery – close to the main house, where the artist lives, but detached enough to be submerged by the garden’s natural elements. Its atmosphere changes according to the seasons – transparent in Winter, colorful in Autumn and Spring, and shaded in Summer,’ writes the practice. 

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
image © Federico Farinatti

 

 

a shed-like typology evoking classic garden galleries 

 

Echoing the aggregation of roofs characterizing its contexts, the artist studio’s shed typology relates to its use, while its curved volume evokes the spatiality of classic garden galleries. Meanwhile, the architectural plan devised by Cabinet (see more here) recalls a wandering condition, providing a sequence from the main house to the artist’s office.

 

Wanting to emphasize a sense of immersion, the architects coated the wooden façades in a dark green hue that blends into the vegetation, creating a field of floating frames where roofs emerge as suspended figures in the garden. A series of bay windows, with varying depth and transparency, were also installed to capture the changing colors, light, and shadows pooling in from the lush garden. ‘At times, they direct the gaze towards meaningful moments – in the office, two eyes look at a specific tree, part of the artist’s universe,’ shares Cabinet

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
the artist studio sports a shed-like typology

 

 

maximizing connection, light, and comfort 

 

The practice placed the artist’s studio on the plot’s furthest corner, as close as possible to both its limits. The resulting design reveals one side embracing the garden’s central space with a curve — a gesture that amplifies its length and suggests a horizontal order linking to the exterior space, thus contrasting with the house’s verticality. Furthermore, the quarter circle shape offers a new circular path that connects the entrance gate to the domestic backrooms, exploring the full depth of the site. Ultimately, the multiplication of interior and exterior paths induces the feeling of ‘a bigger whole’.

 

Inside, a plywood-clad design reigns with different walls loosely shifting to converge to the center of the curve, incorporating the open storage as part of the main space. The timber veins unfold throughout the panel’s surface, underlining its bent spatiality. Lastly, completing the design is a white coating over the plywood paneling and a bright terrazzo flooring; together, these elements endow the studio with a bright spirit.

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
coating the façades in a dark green hue to blend with the garden

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
evoking classic garden galleries

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
the interiors are clad in white-painted plywood and terrazzo flooring

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery

cabinet's snug and curving artist studio in geneva unfolds like a garden gallery
echoing the curving design across the interior

 

 

1/5
1
 
1
 
1
 
1
 
1
 

project info:

 

name: Artist Studio 

location: Conches, Geneva

project period: 2019-2022  

client: Private 

architecture: CABINET – Fanny Noël Diogo Lopes Architectes | @cabinet.architects 

surveying: Ney et Hurni 

structural engineering: ESM ingénieurs civils 

HV engineering: Groupe Chuard 

thermal engineering: Sorane

landscape architecture: Oxalis Architectes Paysagistes 

photography: Federico Farinatti | @federicofarinatti