Nestled into the rolling hills of rural Stirlingshire, a modest zinc-clad home has captured the attention of Scotland’s architecture community. Grianan, designed by Cameron Webster Architects for jewellery designers Neil Smith and Wesley Zwiep, recently claimed both Best Building and the Overall Chapter Prize from the Scottish Society of Architects, cementing its place among the country’s most thoughtful residential projects.
The name itself tells much of the story. Grianan translates from Gaelic as “sunny place,” a fitting description for this single-storey retreat that seems to bask in its landscape setting. The two-bedroom home sits within gardens that the owners meticulously cultivated from what was once an overgrown field. Since acquiring the plot in 2017, Smith and Zwiep have transformed the site into a thriving orchard dotted with over 10 varieties of Birch and Japanese Maple. Pine martens, owls, and woodpeckers now visit regularly, drawn to the flourishing ecosystem.
Designer: Cameron Webster Architects
The clients, who run Orro Contemporary Jewellery in Glasgow’s West End, approached Cameron Webster Architects with a clear vision: create a compact home where they could immerse themselves in their garden while enjoying views of the surrounding hills. The architects responded with a design that privileges simplicity and material honesty. The clean form of the zinc-clad structure sits modestly within its setting, allowing the building’s materiality to speak for itself rather than competing with the landscape.
“There wasn’t a single inspiration point,” explains Stuart Cameron, co-founder of Cameron Webster Architects. “It’s more about developing a plan to suit the site specifics and then considering appropriate materials from an aesthetic and budget point of view.” This pragmatic approach has yielded a home that feels both site-specific and quietly confident in its restraint.
What makes Grianan particularly compelling is its demonstration that thoughtful architecture need not shout to make an impact. The home’s modest footprint and careful siting create a private retreat that enhances rather than dominates its garden setting. For Smith and Zwiep, the result is exactly what they sought: a place to cosy up while remaining deeply connected to the landscape they’ve so carefully nurtured. In an era of increasingly complex residential projects, Grianan offers a quiet reminder that simplicity, executed with precision and care, remains architecture’s most enduring virtue.
The post How a Modest Zinc-Clad Retreat Won Scotland’s Top Architecture Prize first appeared on Yanko Design.

