Ā鶹¾«Ń”graduates have created tree housesāon exhibit this summer at the Cleveland Botanical Gardenāthat encourage us to turn off our electronic devices and embrace the outdoors.
Photographs by Melissa Olson
The tree house is an iconic image of childhoodāif you didnāt have one as a child, you probably wish you had. Even as adults, a tree house reminds us of a simpler time, when the long days of summer stretched before us, when we played outdoors for hours, free from glowing screens and structured activities.
Over the past three decades, changes in agriculture, society and technology have moved us more and more indoors, and many people, especially children, are seldom exposed to natural settings. The Branch Out exhibit at the Cleveland Botanical Garden is out to change thatāand inspire us all to go outside and play!
The botanical garden sent out requests for proposals for a tree house competition last year. Judgesāled by Pete Nelson, star of television show Treehouse Mastersāreviewed the submissions and selected five designs, four of which are by graduates of Kent Stateās College of Architecture and Environmental Design. Each tree house explores a theme related to learning and fun.
āWe set records for our summer attendance last year with this exhibit,ā says Jen Anderson, director of guest services and special exhibits. āBecause the tree houses were exciting to people, we wanted to keep the exhibit for another year and encourage outdoor play.ā
Three new tree houses have been added to the display this summer, and the exhibit is available through August 28. Learn more at .
KENT STATEāS WINNING DESIGNS FROM LAST YEAR:
Acoustic Canopy
Designer: Alan Hipps, B.S. ā08, M. Arch. ā09, Sap + Iron | Design Build
Builder: Sap + Iron | Design Build*
Theme: Music
Whatās Up: Inspired by the āgolden section spiralāāa familiar ratio found in natureāthe layout resembles a treble clef. Everything in the structure is based off the number eight (the number of notes in an octave). Rhythm instruments allow visitors to make their own music. The tree house is suspended from branches by cables and anchored to a dawn redwood tree with bolts designed so the tree can envelop them as its trunk expands.
Twisted Tree
Project Architect: Mike Christ, B.Arch. ā95, Vocon
Builder:&²Ō²ś²õ±č;¶Ł“Ē²Ō±ō±š²āās
Theme: Play
Whatās Up: This multi-level wooden structure promotes play within its winding frame. Visitors can ride on a swing at the ground level and play wind chimes made of electrical conduit while climbing towards the tree canopy.
Giant Jack in the Pulpit
Designer: Steve Bell, B.S. ā07, M. Arch. ā08, ThenDesign Architecture (TDA)
Builder: Todayās Lifestyle Construction, Inc.
Theme: Art
Whatās Up: Inspired by the story of Jack and the Beanstalk, this tree house enables visitors to climb inside a giant woodland flower and experience nature in a whole new way.
Note: Only on exhibit last year.
Seasons
Designer: Mykie Hrusovski, B.S. ā08, Sap + Iron | Design Build
Builder: Sap + Iron | Design Build*
Theme: Reading
Whatās Up: Built around the trunk of a tulip poplar, this ātree inside a houseā acts as a reading room, with slanted slots in one wall for books and a place to write poetry. Reminiscent of a one-room schoolhouse, the structure is wrapped in western red cedar and hand charred with a torch, which protects it from weathering, bugs and rot.
*Members of Sap + Iron | Design Build include Charles Frederick, B. Arch. ā96, interim director of Kent Stateās graduate landscape architecture program, Alan Hipps, B.S. ā08, M.Arch. ā09 and Mykie Hrusovski, B.S. ā08.