Only a 30-minute car drive south of Oslo one can find the picturesque town of Drøbak, both a refuge and tourist magnet neighbouring the capital of Norway. On Gylteveien 4, a steep, rocky site directly on the coast of the Oslo fjord, a detached house demonstrates how contemporary architecture is anchored within landscape and tradition. Completed in 2024, the single-family house reflects Norwegian traditional wooden architecture but supplemented by prominent extensions in red brick. Initially, the team explored brick for the main volume and wood for the extensions, but the plan evolved towards the opposite. Using white vertical wood cladding on the main volume and red roof tiles was reminiscent of the architectural tradition of the area, while the fully red extensions add a soft modern touch.
The material choice was not only an aesthetic one: “The location by the sea required materials that can withstand salt spray,” explains Line Stokholm, partner and general manager at Kile Stockholm Arkitekter. The sea spray often reaches high up the slope, and the winds can be strong. The result is a largely maintenance-free exterior that protects the underlying structure.