Alt Studios
Glen Aray TRS reimagines a former telephone repeater station as a partially off-grid retreat nestled within the Scottish Highlands. Once a node of communication, the project explores the idea that to reconnect with ourselves, nature and one another, we must first disconnect. Set within an idyllic glen overlooking the River Aray near Inveraray, the proposal transforms overlooked infrastructure into a place of quiet reflection.
The design process began long before the first sketch. Time spent camping on site, embracing Scotland’s Right to Roam and tracing forgotten military roads established an approach grounded in observation, drawing and research. Rather than drawing from conventional cabin typologies, the proposal evolved through a careful study of Argyll’s rich tradition of micro-architecture, alongside the writings of Neil Munro and the drawings of George Houston, shaping an architectural language rooted in landscape, memory and craft.
Inspired by Scotland’s 1000 Huts movement, yet guided by the permanence of the existing stone structure, the proposal seeks to create a retreat intended for generations rather than seasons. Carefully framed views choreograph the experience of the surrounding landscape, while board-marked concrete, adaptive reuse, rainwater harvesting and the considered reuse of existing materials establish a restrained and enduring architectural response.
Conceived as client, designer, developer and long-term custodian, Glen Aray TRS continues to evolve through drawing, making and material experimentation. As the project has developed, elements of the work have been exhibited at 3daysofdesign in Copenhagen and the Aram Gallery in London, reflecting an ongoing exploration of place, making and contemporary rural architecture.