I love a home that is designed to do everything you need and nothing you don’t. The Chillhouse, or La Chillhouse as it’s known in its native tongue, is exactly that kind of home. Built for two, designed for off-grid living, and rooted in a distinctly French woodworking tradition, it’s the latest statement from Brittany-based artisan workshop Atelier Bois d’ici. Small in footprint, deliberate in execution, and almost stubbornly unhurried in its approach, the Chillhouse offers a compelling vision of what modern self-sufficient living can actually look like.
Atelier Bois d’ici, roughly translated as “the local wood workshop, has never been a typical construction company. Wood sits at the absolute center of everything they do, not merely as a raw material but as a guiding principle. The studio operates its own sawmill and timber storage facility on the same grounds as the workshop, meaning each build begins not with pre-cut lumber but with raw logs. This hands-on relationship with the material shapes every decision, from species selection to finish, and gives their homes a depth of character that factory-built alternatives simply cannot replicate.
Designer: Atelier Bois d’ici
Sitting on a double-axle trailer and measuring 6.6 meters in length, the Chillhouse is compact by design rather than by compromise. The exterior is wrapped in natural timber cladding, warm and textured in a way that reads differently depending on the landscape around it — equally at home against pine trees or open countryside. The profile is clean without being cold, and the construction feels solid in a way that telegraphs craftsmanship before you’ve even stepped inside. It’s built for couples or solo dwellers ready to trade square footage for genuine freedom.
As you enter the home, the living room makes its intentions clear immediately. A low-profile sofa, discreet storage tucked into every available corner, and a wood-burning stove anchor the space with a sense of warmth that’s both literal and atmospheric. Nothing is decorative for the sake of it. Every element earns its place, and the result is a room that feels genuinely comfortable rather than curated for a photoshoot.
The kitchen runs on the same ethos of considered practicality. A two-burner propane stove, a compact oven, a sink, and a small refrigerator cover every real cooking need without overpromising on space. It’s a kitchen built for people who actually cook, not one designed to impress during an open house. Adjacent to it, the bathroom offers the essentials in a layout that wastes nothing.
Above it all, the bedroom loft is reached by a staircase with storage built directly into each step — one of many small design decisions that quietly distinguish the Chillhouse from less considered builds. The sleeping space itself sits low under the roofline, intimate and removed from the rest of the home in the best possible way. Atelier Bois d’ici sources all timber from within a close radius of the workshop, avoiding chemical treatments entirely and letting the natural resilience of carefully chosen wood species do the work. The Chillhouse doesn’t shout about sustainability, it just lives it.
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