Jeylu is one of the first and largest ski resorts in Norway. They come there not only in winter: in the summer they can go hiking or just admire the beautiful landscapes. Yeilu is very popular, and many want to build a country house there. Among them were Ramstad's customers - a family of four, expecting another child. They offered the architect a clear program: four bedrooms, a separate dining and living area, a lounge for young people, and a mezzanine floor for young children. Also, the house was supposed to have an extension with a room for guests or one of the grandparents who stopped by to visit relatives.
Ramstad erected a clean-cut house on the slope with a traditional gable roof. Its austere form is emphasized by the uniform timber cladding of the walls and roof. At the same time, the structure of the building itself is far from tradition: the long main volume is “split” into three similar blocks, each of which ends with a panoramic window.
At the “splitting point” is the kitchen, from which the dining and living areas diverge; the third "finger" is occupied by the guest room. In the main volume there are bedrooms and a bathroom, fenced off from the corridor by sliding doors. In the glazed end, the aforementioned "lounge" for older children is arranged, and above it there is a "bed" for children.