Skubianka House / SZCZ Jakub Szczesny / Poland

  • Project: Skubianka House
  • Architect: SZCZ Jakub Szczesny
  • Location: Poland, Skubianka
  • Year: 2025
  • Area: 162 m2
  • Photography: Nate Cook

A Hidden Gem in the Forest

Tucked away in a mixed forest near a river outside of Warsaw, Skubianka House emerged from the shell of a 1970s/80s modernist structure originally built under duress and shortage of materials. The original building — created between 1976 and 1981 — was constructed using improvised materials such as tram rails for ceilings. When the current owners stumbled across it (while walking their dog!) and fell for its odd “blocky” shape, they commissioned SZCZ Jakub Szczesny to transform the dwelling while preserving its unusual geometry.

Preserving Form, Innovating Inside

Szczesny’s strategy was clear: keep the stepped, pyramid-like massing of the original, accept the low ceilings (212 cm on ground floor) and lean into the intimate scale, but open up the house to nature through glazing, terraces, and structural interventions. Large picture windows, floor-skylights and a green roof above the garage lift the home visually and experientially into its landscape. The clients consciously opted for minimal railings on the upper level terrace in favour of an unmediated connection with the forest.

Materials & Atmosphere

The outer shell remains subdued, designed to recede into the woodland backdrop; internally, warmth and material honesty take over. Steel framing with red accents, wide panoramic windows, and custom furniture built by the owner create a handcrafted feel rarely seen in a renovation of this scope. The living room floor includes a glazed section that opens a vertical visual link between levels — a poetic move that enhances spatial depth as well as natural light.

Spatial Organisation & Program

  • Ground floor (212 cm ceiling height): guest bedrooms for the adult daughters, a study, bathroom/boiler space.

  • First floor: kitchen/dining and living areas, opening onto a new terrace replacing the original one.

  • Top floor (master level, 250 cm height): master bedroom with forest and river views, small bathroom, two terraces. Garage footprint shifted and topped with a green roof accessible from the higher part of the sloping plot.

Landscape & Context

The house is set on a gently sloping plot adjacent to a river. The original scheme ignored the steep terrain, but the renovation embraces it — the house ascends, terraces cascade, and a solid silhouette becomes softly camouflaged by trees. The decision to cover the garage with a green roof signals a respect for the land, not just a building on it.

Why It Matters

Skubianka House is not merely a retrofit — it’s a transformation of legacy architecture into contemporary living that embraces constraint (low ceilings, difficult original form) as design opportunity. It stands as evidence that what others discard can become what makes a project singular. The blend of rugged history, poetic materiality and thoughtful landscape integration elevates it to a narrative worth sharing.

In the world of minimalist retreats cloaked in green and glass, Skubianka House distinguishes itself by anchoring its rare narrative — a house born of crisis, rediscovered by chance, re-envisioned with intention. For designers, the project offers lessons in adaptation, respect for place, and how unconventional typologies can yield unexpectedly rich architectural poetry.

Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny, night window view in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Front facade of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny with driveway and red car in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Rear two-storey facade of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny surrounded by forest in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Garden and timber deck of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Covered terrace under the deck at Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Daytime rear facade of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny framed by forest trees in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Upper terrace of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny with forest view in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Dining room at Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny with large forest-facing window in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Open-plan kitchen and dining area of Skubianka House by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny in Skubianka
Photography © Nate Cook
Dog lying on glass floor in modern home interior with wood flooring and a floor lamp.
Photography © Nate Cook
Bright contemporary living room with large window showcasing lush greenery, featuring modern furniture, plants, and an interior design emphasizing natural light and cozy ambiance.
Photography © Nate Cook
Aesthetic staircase with wooden steps and modern black railing in minimalist home interior, natural lighting from window, stylish decor, ideal for modern architecture art designs.
Photography © Nate Cook
Contemporary black concrete tiny house with large sliding glass doors, set in a forest environment, showcasing modern architecture and eco-friendly design elements.
Photography © Nate Cook
Vibrant modern entryway with bold red cabinet, natural wood storage, sleek dark ceiling, and contemporary artwork, showcasing stylish interior design and creative architectural use of space.
Photography © Nate Cook
Bright modern interior with staircase and colorful artwork, featuring skylights and sleek red wall accents, exemplifies contemporary architecture and innovative design for stylish living spaces.
Photography © Nate Cook
Bright interior with large windows showcasing a lush garden and spiral staircase, modern home design featuring indoor plants, cozy yellow armchair, and natural wood accents, emphasizing harmony with nature.
Photography © Nate Cook
Modern outdoor patio with sleek black walls, wooden ceiling, stylish red chairs, and lush greenery, exemplifying contemporary architecture and innovative design in outdoor living spaces.
Photography © Nate Cook
Spiral outdoor staircase surrounded by lush green foliage and trees with a dog standing on the lower level, showcasing modern architecture integrated with nature, perfect for garden and landscape design inspiration.
Photography © Nate Cook

Posted by SZCZ Jakub Szczesny

SZCZ is a Warsaw-based design studio founded by architect and graphic designer Jakub Szczęsny, working across architecture, interiors, furniture, objects and exhibitions. The studio’s work is rooted in exploration and cross-disciplinary collaboration, treating spatial design and materiality as interlinked with narrative, art-practice and socio-cultural context. With a foundation in critical design and collaborative research, SZCZ often investigates the boundaries between architecture and everyday life, delivering projects that are inventive, thought-provoking and layered.