The Backcountry Hut
Award of Merit Winner
The Backcountry Hut
Leckie Studio Architecture + Design

The Backcountry Hut takes IKEA founder Ingvar Kamprad’s ideal of affordable, well-designed products “for the many people” into the realm of lodging. Created for outdoor enthusiasts, the modular hut is designed as a flat-packed kit of parts that are easily assembled into an affordable recreation structure.
Packed onto pallets, the hut’s components can be shipped by air or off-road vehicles to remote sites. Minimal site work is needed: sonotube footings sit in hand-dug holes. Volunteers can erect the engineered wood post-and-beam frame by hand, and then, using a winch and pulley system, hoist prefabricated infill panels into place.
The basic 10-foot-wide module encloses 191 square feet and sleeps up to four people; additional modules can be connected to accommodate more people. Optional inserts include a propane tank, composting toilet, and a solar power storage unit. The design encourages passive cooling, and includes photovoltaic panels to be installed on the sloped roof at mid-latitudes, or on a vertical façade at high and low latitudes.
A range of interior fit-out options and exterior finishes is available. This includes the possibility of fur-nishing the prefabricated shells to support year-round occupancy as a tiny “frontcountry” house.
Jury Comments
Architect
Credits
CLIENT The Backcountry Hut Company
ARCHITECT TEAM Michael Leckie, Ryan Nelson, Emily Dovbniak, Symon Tiansay, Irena Jenei, Elaine Tat, Oskar Geyti.
PRE-FABRICATION AND STRUCTURAL cascadianwoodtech
AREA AND BUDGET 191 ft² ($69,000) / 527 ft² ($89,000) / 748 ft² ($119,000) / 937 ft² ($139,000) – all budgets for shell only
STATUS Construction documents; construction of first prototype in summer 2017