This Upside-Down Boat Blocking a Mountain Trail Is Actually An Architecture Award-Winning Chapel

Picture yourself hiking through the Italian mountains and suddenly there’s a wooden boat blocking the trail. Except it’s upside down. And it’s not actually a boat. This is La Barca, a timber pavilion that just won the 2025 Festival di Microarchitettura, and it’s one of those projects that works because it commits fully to a single odd idea.

Marina Poli, Clément Molinier, and Philippe Paumelle designed it for a trail in Piobbico, and the whole thing sits there like a beached hull that wandered way too far upstream. You can walk around it, sure, but there’s this narrow gap slicing through the middle that basically dares you to squeeze through. Once you’re inside, you get the full boat experience: curved timber ribs overhead, a proper keel running down the center organizing the floor planks, daylight pouring in from the open top. It’s using actual boat construction language, not just boat-ish shapes.

Designers: Marina Poli, Clément Molinier & Philippe Paumelle.

The sandwich-structure ribs are cut from regular boards, which keeps the whole thing light enough to be temporary but sturdy enough to handle weather and people climbing on it. Because let’s be honest, people are absolutely climbing on it. Six porticoes break up the interior corridor, the plank walls curve into proper half-hulls at each end, and they dropped four local stones inside as ballast. Another stone anchors the bow. These aren’t decorative choices, they’re the structural and conceptual glue holding the nautical metaphor together.

What’s interesting is how this thing refuses to be just one thing. Some people see a chapel for quiet contemplation. Others treat it like playground equipment. A few probably Instagram it as abstract sculpture and move on. The architects knew this would happen and designed for it. Instead of forcing a single reading, they built something slippery enough to mean different things depending on who’s looking.

We’ve seen a lot of temporary pavilions lately (especially at the Osaka Expo) that lean hard on parametric design or CNC fabrication to justify their existence. La Barca goes the opposite direction with traditional joinery and basic lumber, but it lands harder because the concept is so committed. An upturned boat. In the mountains. Blocking a hiking path. It’s absurd enough to stop you in your tracks, familiar enough to feel approachable, and strange enough that you’re still thinking about it three switchbacks later.

The real test for these festival installations is whether they earn the disruption they cause to the landscape. Most don’t. They show up, people take photos for a season, then they’re dismantled and forgotten. La Barca might actually stick around in memory because it understood something crucial: sometimes the best move is to drop something obviously wrong in exactly the right spot and let the tension do the work.

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