The A-frame cabin has been a mainstay of wilderness getaways since the 1930s. Originally designed by modernist architect Rudolph Schindler for what he called an “all-roof” home in Lake Arrowhead, ...
This 1960s A-frame cabin went through a massive rehabilitation that took it from a rundown shack into a beautiful home tailored to the needs of its owners. Architect Jean Verville collaborated with ...
Shortly after listing the treehouse on Airbnb, Broomfield completed the Birch Falls Spa Cabin, a studio with an 18-foot-long ...
With summer vacation coming into full swing, charming A-frame cabins are once again popping up all over Instagram. The Everywhere Travel Co. is also jumping on the A-frame bandwagon and has just begun ...
We gave interior designers Darren Jett, Chiara de Rege, and Jenny Kaplan a photo of the same bare A-Frame cabin—then asked each of them to create a design for it in their particular style, however ...
An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link Den Outdoors unveiled a do-it-yourself A-frame Cabin kit that can be assembled in three days. Unlike most cabin and tiny home makers that sell ...
The tiny home trend has taken the internet by storm, spawning versions of all types, from modern modular to floating homes. But some of these small spaces might actually put a huge dent in your wallet ...
Tiny House Expedition on MSN

Exploring our 1970s A-frame cabin tour!

Join us as we tour our PNW tiny homestead. We’ve settled into a 1.25-acre property with a 1970s A-frame cabin and various ...
Tiny house builder Everywhere offers a luxurious take on the classic A-frame cabin with its Ayfraym. Bringing to mind Build Tiny's Buster, the cabin is available to purchase in two price points: ...
The cabins for Camp Lakota are made of 15 panels each that can be flat packed and shipped. The design aims to minimize disruption to the natural environment through an Ikea-like assembly. At 230 sq ft ...
The A-frame house is an icon. With its steep roofline, it became a wildly popular building type, particularly in vacation homes, through the mid-’50s and ’60s. Now a company called Everywhere Inc.