Notice: This site has recently been refreshed. In order to maintain results, we are completing the work live. This means there will be a short period where trade mark symbols, certain codes, and sequences are being corrected while the new defaults are being rendered. We apologise for any inconvenience.

Search For

Modern Treehouse Design

A unique and sophisticated treehouse design has been erected at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, offering visitors a safe place for play and a bird's eye view.

Modern Treehouse Design

Architects Ifat Finkelman and Deborah Warschawski have built a slatted wooden structure around an old pine tree to update a courtyard space at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem.

Situated at the entrance of the Israel Museum's Youth Wing for Art Education, the IMJ Tree House provides a gathering point for both adult and children visitors.

"As a tribute to the childhood collective memory of a treehouse, we positioned a small roofed structure where children can hide and overlook at high up a tilted trunk raised above the meticulous surroundings of the museum," said the architects.

The treehouse is made up of 2cm-thick hardwood boards fixed onto a steel skeleton – contrasting with its concrete and stone architectural surroundings.

A decked platform creates a seating area around the outside of the playground before ramping up to provide access to the treehouse. Children can also enter and exit the structure via a metal pole with foot pegs. A hole in the treehouse floor accommodates the pine trunk, and provides another surface to clamber up.

An undulating ground topography surrounds the building. It is covered with a soft EPDM rubber surface. "The rubber surface hides the underground infrastructure configuration, as well as a widespread root system from the pine tree," said the architects.

At night, the treehouse is the only area of the playground to be illuminated.

Image Gallery