The Czech studio IKA Architekti used used and swimming materials to create this self -designed sauna in BRNO, which stands on the railway sleeping and overcomes corrugated glass fiber panels.
The sauna structure is called Upcycled, and it sits four times under an apple tree in the park of the co -founder of IKA Architekti Tomás Dvořák.
The personal project of the studio committed to sustainable and local construction practices, and “his desire to build something in our hands instead of just clicking on emails and responding to them.”

“This is what happens when you pass through used websites and when you like to collect materials that may still be at hand,” said IKA Architekti.
He added: “It might seem to be a storage, but when you are an architect as well, you suddenly have a lot of great things that you can build – this is exactly what we sometimes spend free weekends as architects.”
Wooden asleep was used as rescued as a sauna institutions, which consist of wooden platforms filled with sheep wool insulation and diving internally with fir panels.

Behind the blogger sauna stove, cement-linked particles-a material made of wood and cement-are used to improve heat retention. These are also lined on the floor, which is isolated with sheep wool.
The studio said: “The most enjoyable part of the construction was isolating the structure with raw sheep wool, which we gained reasonably from a local shepherd.”
“We have cleaned wool, the largest remains behind it,” its former residents “, sheep, stuffed in the walls and ceiling structure,” he added.
Due to the inappropriate sizes of the founded materials, the panels and arches are used to connect the pieces together. According to IKA Architekti, these were the only new materials used in construction.

The outer part of the sauna is covered with used collapsed fiberglass panels, installed on the wood network and “overlapping like scales”.
The studio said that to give the building a “softer look”, these panels are curved around the sauna corners, and is also used to hide its entrance.

Besides the sauna, a cooling swimming pool was created by reusing an old mining cart and drawing gold to suit the cladding tones of the fiberglass.
Another sauna that has recently appeared on Dezeen the Drying Shed, a red structure wearing clothes in Sussex by Buildes, and the hot point of OSLO Works, which floats above the rock beach of the Nesodden island in Norway.
Photography by Thomas Slavic.
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