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    Eight immersive saunas in peaceful settings

    A floating sauna and a cavernous coastal grotto feature in our latest lookbook, which collects eight sauna interiors that provide a warming antidote to colder months.

    Usually contained within a single room, a sauna is a sealed place where visitors experience dry or wet heat produced through a variety of mechanisms that are designed to clean and refresh the body – a ritual that is reported to date back to as early as 4000 BC.
    Saunas are typically made of wood due to the material’s ability to absorb heat but remain cool to the touch. The following projects demonstrate how architects and designers have interpreted this longstanding practice in contemporary settings.
    This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring cosy living rooms, retro eateries and dining rooms with built-in seating.
    Photo is by Filip GränströmBig Branzino, Sweden, by Sandellsandberg 

    The Big Branzino is a floating sauna by Swedish studio Sandellsandberg that was topped with a distinctive bow-shaped roof.
    Designed to drift against the shifting backdrop of the Stockholm archipelago, the sauna features a red cedar-clad interior including a bespoke stove flanked by two-tiered seating.
    Find out more about Big Branzino ›
    Photo is courtesy of PartisansGrotto, Canada, by Partisans
    Canadian studio Partisans designed a cavernous cedar interior for a private burnt-timber sauna that was created to emulate a seaside grotto.
    Situated on a craggy spot on the shore of Lake Huron, north of Toronto, the structure features skewed porthole windows and a curvy alternative to traditional geometric stepped sauna seating.
    Find out more about Grotto ›
    Photo is by Jonas Aarre SommarsetThe Bands, Norway, by Oslo School of Architecture and Design students
    A trio of staggered timber bands forms this student-designed sauna, which also functions as a picnic terrace and has a sunken hot tub on its exterior.
    The building has three different gabled roof profiles, as well as glass and translucent polycarbonate plastic windows that illuminate the larch-clad interior.
    Find out more about The Bands ›
    Photo is courtesy of HaeckelsSauna, UK, by Haeckels
    Skincare brand Haeckels took cues from traditional Victorian bathing machines – wooden carts that provided privacy for people to change clothes at the seaside – when creating this sauna on the beach of southeast England’s Margate.
    The brand used materials that were as close as possible to those that would have been used to design original bathing machines. A wood-burning stove features inside, while timber benches provide seating with a sea view framed by an external wax-cloth awning.
    Find out more about this sauna ›
    Photo is Riikka KantinkoskiTullin, Finland, by Studio Puisto
    Finnish practice Studio Puisto paid tribute to the concept of the late nineteenth-century korttelisauna, or neighbourhood sauna, when designing this communal complex in the city of Tampere.
    Throughout the complex, the interior is characterised by rough concrete finishes layered with warm local pine – a material used in saunas all over Finland.
    Find out more about Tullin ›
    Photo is by Noé CotterLöyly, Switzerland, by Trolle Rudebeck Haar
    Designer Trolle Rudebeck Haar built a prefabricated floating sauna on Lake Geneva while studying at the Lausanne University of Art and Design.
    Created to explore the concept of micro-architecture, Löyly spans 2.2 square metres and features a Japanese sliding door – known as a shōji – made from ribbed translucent glass.
    Find out more about Löyly ›
    Photo is by RaumlaborGothenburg Public Sauna, Sweden, by Raumlabor
    German studio Raumlabor worked with local residents in Gothenburg to design this public sauna, which is raised over the water in the Swedish city’s Frihamnen port and accessed via a wooden bridge.
    Thin larch strips line the interior and create texture across the curved and angular surfaces of the ceiling and walls.
    Find out more about Gothenburg Public Sauna ›
    Photo is by Riikka KantinkoskiSaunaravintola Kiulu, Findland, by Studio Puisto
    Studio Puisto designed the Saunaravintola Kiulu wellness centre to combine a duo of saunas and a restaurant.
    Characterised by dark wood cladding and red epoxy flooring, the smaller of the two saunas is contained within its own independent timber cabin.
    Find out more about Saunaravintola Kiulu ›
    This is the latest in our lookbooks series, which provides visual inspiration from Dezeen’s archive. For more inspiration see previous lookbooks featuring cosy living rooms, retro eateries and dining rooms with built-in seating.

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    Dezeen's Pinterest roundup features nine saunas in touch with nature

    Saunas are trending on Pinterest and Dezeen has featured some of the best, including a floating sauna in Stockholm and a three-storey, outdoor sauna in the USA. Follow Dezeen on Pinterest and read on to discover the projects.

    Pinners have been attracted to Dezeen’s sauna board. The most popular saunas are inspired by their natural surroundings and have cosy and relaxing interiors.
    An out-building sauna in Canada, up a slope behind the main cabin, stood out due to its miniature size and unique shape.
    Scroll down to see nine popular projects pinned on Dezeen’s Pinterest and browse our sauna Pinterest board to see more.

    Ambassador Crescent, Canada, by BattersbyHowat Architects

    This detached sauna, built on the property of a mountainside home in Whistler, British Columbia, was designed by Vancouver-based studio BattersbyHowat Architects.
    Clad in standing seam metal, the small sauna mimics the design of the nearby holiday home.
    Find out more about the Ambassador Crescent ›

    The Big Branzino, Stockholm, by Sandellsandberg
    Pine planks clad the exterior of a floating sauna by Swedish studio Sandellsandberg, which they designed to blend in with the surrounding forests.
    For the interior, the studio used red cedar and added a fireplace, meaning that the central space can be heated for overnight trips when not used as a sauna.
    Find out more about The Big Branzino ›

    Bademaschinen, Norway, by ACT! Studio and Borhaven Arkitekter
    ACT! Studio and Borhaven Arkitekter designed a collection of floating red and orange buildings in Oslo harbour to be a playful and relaxing space sauna.
    For the project, the studio covered the floors with red vinyl. Birch plywood was used for the walls, tiered seating and changing rooms.
    Find out more about Bademaschinen ›

    Löyly, Switzerland, by Trolle Rudebeck Haar
    Graduate Trolle Rudebeck Haar designed another floating sauna in Switzerland to fit up to three people. It has a sloped roof, wooden stove, bench, translucent glass windows and an exterior deck.
    Löyly sits on a floating pontoon deck which allows it to be placed on any water with low-wave motion.
    Find out more about Löyly ›

    Saunaravintola Kiulu, Finland, by Studio Puisto
    Simple and traditional materials such as black wood and red epoxy flooring were used by Studio Puisto to create a sombre and crisp atmosphere for this sauna at a lakeside wellness centre in the town of Ähtäri, Finland
    Located in its own independent wooden cabin, the studio added a large window with the aim of connecting with the surrounding environment.
    Find out more about Saunaravintola Kiulu ›

    Sauna Tower, USA, by BarlisWedlick
    This treehouse-style, three-storey outdoor sauna in New York’s Hudson Valley was designed by American studio BarlisWedlick.
    A concrete sauna acts as the base for stacked-timber platforms made from Alaskan yellow cedar, topped with a viewing platform.
    Find out more about the Sauna Tower ›

    The Arctic Sauna Pavillion, Finland, by Toni Yli-Suvanto Architects
    The surrounding natural environment inspired the design of the Arctic Sauna Pavilion by Tony Yli-Suvanto Architects in Lapland, Finland.
    Inside, both bathing and relaxation take place in the same space, in accordance with an ancient arctic tradition. The walls of the building tilt outwards in the local custom to prevent the timber wall construction from getting wet.
    Find out more about The Arctic Sauna Pavillion  ›

    Atmosphere, Australia, by Studio Rain
    Studio Rain created a temporary sauna that is prefabricated and off-grid. Polycarbonate panels clads the walls and ceilings and it is heated by a wood-burning stove.
    Made of reclaimed timber, it can be built, disassembled and reused without the need for any equipment.
    Find out more about Atmosphere  ›

    Dark Spa, UK, by Neil Dusheiko Architects
    This spa was built in the garden of a renovated Victorian semi-detached home by Neil Dusheiko Architects. Inside the spa, the studio added a Japanese soaking tub, sauna, shower, gym and relaxation room with a fold-down bed.
    With walls clad in Sapele timber and black slate flooring, the Dark Spa is intended to be “silent and mysterious”, the studio told Dezeen.
    Find out more about the Dark Spa ›
    Follow Dezeen on Pinterest
    Pinterest is one of Dezeen’s fastest-growing social media networks with over 1.4 million followers and more than ten million monthly views. Follow our Pinterest to see the latest architecture, interiors and design projects – there are more than four hundred boards to browser and pin from.
    Currently, our most popular boards are retail interiors and staircases.

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