Inspiring Cabin Located in Budapest Give You A Tranquil Workstation

The playful Workstation cabin is the ideal, private spot for work and meetings, but it can also function as a guest room or a playroom for the kids.

Although pandemic-related measures are slowly lifted, there are still millions working from home and dreaming about having an extra room designated as an office. The brand new, unique workstation designed by the creative architecture and design studio, Hello Wood fulfils this dream without having to expand your home.

002-workstation-cabin-wood

The playful Workstation cabin is the ideal, private spot for work and meetings, but it can also function as a guest room or a playroom for the kids, and it is the perfect refuge should you need a tranquil place to relax or immerse yourself into creativity.

003-workstation-cabin-wood

Transcending the conventional cube-shape, Workstation is more like a piece of art that blends into the landscape. In the pebble-shaped cabin that brings the illustrations in our favourite childhood book to life, nature feels truly close: the interior is dominated by natural Scots pine wood and gigantic windows invite the world of the garden inside.

004-workstation-cabin-wood

Workstation adapts to the change of seasons; its insulated interior ensures the comfort of the room in the winter, while the built-in A/C protects from the heat of summer days. Seamless work is made possible by the electrical outlets, and you won’t have problems with the internet access either.

004-workstation-cabin-wood

Installation takes only a few days; modular prefab homes have the advantage of being delivered in one, so the customer doesn’t have to live at a construction site for months. Thanks to its low energy consumption and environmental focus, the cabin is also greener than a house built of non-renewable materials with conventional technologies.

009-workstation-cabin-wood

– by Matt Watts, Photography by Zsuzsa Darab

Discuss in Kanban. Scan the QR-code and join ArtThat Elites Club, then re-create with artists and take silk-screen handwork home!

More from ArtThat Editorial

ArtThat HD: Edvard Munch, The Sick Child, 1885–1886

Edvard Munch The Sick Child 1885–1886 Oil on canvas 120 x 118.5...
Read More

Leave a Reply