The owner returned to Glen Arbor to create a place where his family can make memories, as his great-great-grandfather’s home did for him.

The cabin came about over whitefish sandwiches and iced teas. In a local tavern in a sleepy lakeside town in Northern Michigan, Pennsylvania-based couple Kevin and Anna broke bread, talked ideas, and drew a few initial sketches of a new retreat with Peter Bohlin and Bill James, the cofounder and architectural designer, respectively, of Bohlin Cywinski Jackson (BCJ).

Architecture firm Bohlin Cywinski Jackson designed a 1,000-square-foot cabin in Glen Arbor, Michigan, for a growing Pennsylvania family with ties to the area.
Photo by Corey Gaffer
At a glance, the modest 1,000-square-foot cabin the group ultimately built is at odds with anything BCJ has done before, which includes glass-walled Apple stores, expansive yet restrained residences, and civic landmarks from libraries to university buildings. So how did the firm come to take on what, according to Kevin, is the firm’s smallest project yet?

The entry is painted John Deere–green in a nod to the area’s farming history. Architectural designer Bill James of BCJ spray painted metal samples in his backyard to find the right hue, shipping them to his client, Kevin, for review.
Photo by Corey Gaffer
Kevin grew up traveling from Pittsburgh to Lake Michigan, where his great-great-grandfather built a small cottage in the 1920s. He and his extended family would spend summer days at the tiny property; it was a place where Fourth of July weekend meant 15 people packed into the house, with Kevin sleeping in a bunk above his great-grandmother. After the cabin was sold in 2016, an event that Kevin compares to a death in the family, he wanted a similar retreat to continue making memories with his own growing family. As a kid, his favorite street in the area was a leafy one that dead-ended near the shores of Lake Michigan—and it still is. Recently, he and Anna purchased an empty parcel there with plans to build their own cabin by the lake.

Marine-grade plywood forms built-in storage spaces, adding a layer of warmth and texture to the restrained interior.
Photo by Corey Gaffer
See the full story on Dwell.com: His Family Sold Off the Lake Cabin—But Its Spirit Lives On in a New 1,000-Square-Foot Retreat
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