View Inside This Cozy And Adorable 3 Bedroom Log Cabin
Written by: Arron J. Staff writer @ Hyggehous.com
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You'll want to take a look inside the Chatka Siedmiu Krasnoludkow (Hut of the Seven Dwarfs) for all of the handcrafted details throughout.
The log cabin sits on the edge of the forest, near a real farm and the Tatra National Park. The log cabin is close to the Chocholowska Valley and the Mrozna Cave and Gubalowka. The log cottage was erected recently and spread just below the forest. Shop Tiny Homes The log cabin can accommodate 6 to 8 people with 3 bedrooms with double beds, a living room with a sofa bed, a kitchen, a dining room, and 2 bathrooms,
mood to warm your feet by the fireplace with a cup of coffee in hand, garden to run barefoot, terrace with a phenomenal view and a rocking chair.
The log cabin also has a well-equipped kitchen with cheeses, eggs, and milk, and some very good addresses with real regional food.
When you take a look around this beautiful log cabin you'll be sure to fall in love with the Zakopane Style of log cabin building. The Zakopane Style draws upon the motifs and traditions in the buildings of the Carpathian Mountains, which was created by Stanislaw Witkiewicz who was born in the Lithuanian village of Pasiause and is now considered to be one of the core traditions of the Goral people. The log cabin looks like it stepped right out of the pages of a fairy tale book. The Zakopane Style of log house construction combines wooden framing and reinforced stone structures, which is typical of Goral cottages, and traditional folk motifs with elements of Art Nouveau.
The main features of the Zakopane Style of log house construction include a radiant sun on the gable, intricate flower carvings, especially on the window and door frames, and the six-petal rosette solar symbol.
Details of woodwork, from Wladyslaw Matlakowski’s works on the architectural design and decorative art of the Podhale highlanders from 1892 and 1901. As the Zakopane style spread outside of rural Podhale to the urban centers of Galicia and Poland, the style was also adapted to brick and stone construction, with only limited details made from wood. As a result, you'll find elements such as the timber cottage outlays, together with the locking joints and lattice-work, that were transformed into masonry while the popular motifs that were traditionally carved in wood were applied to stone and appeared in non-traditional places.
You'll find several such buildings that were constructed in Lviv the capital of Galicia, the administrative region that Podhale and Zakopane both were a part of.
At least two Zakopane Style-influenced buildings were erected in the small city of Przemysl, which is geographically located between Zakopane and Lviv. Today, you will find the Zakopane style dominated architectural design in the Podhale and other Goral Lands for many years. Although the cutoff date for buildings designed in the Zakopane Style of Architecture is usually held to be 1914, many new villas and highlander log homes are built according to the architectural model that was devised by Witkiewicz to the present day.