Tucked Between Two Ancient Stumps, This House Barely Touches the Ground — And That’s Exactly the Point

Some buildings earn their names. The Floating House by Vancouver-based SMStudio — completed in 2023 on the western ridge of Bowen Island, British Columbia — is one of them. Bowen Island sits just 20 minutes by ferry from Vancouver’s Horseshoe Bay, close enough for a commute, far enough to feel like another world.

SMStudio founder Simon Montgomery found a site on a rocky ridge where two ancient, burnt-out old-growth stumps stand like sentinels over the land. Rather than clear them or work around them, he positioned the house directly between them. The building wasn’t placed on the land so much as fitted into it.

Designer: SMStudio

The name earns its keep. A cantilever lifts the structure fractionally off the bedrock, leaving a deliberate shadow gap at the base — a move that is at once structural and philosophical. The house appears to hover, weightless above the ground it occupies. It’s a gesture borrowed from Japanese spatial thinking, where the relationship between a building and its site is considered with almost ceremonial care.

The exterior reads as elemental: a steeply pitched gable roof clad in steel standing-seam panels, cedar walls left to weather naturally into the forest palette, and a form so spare it borders on sculptural. There is no decorative noise here. Every decision is load-bearing, aesthetically speaking. The plan is simple and asymmetrical, its two wings arranged to navigate the site’s dual elevations — a higher forested platform and an open field below that drops away to reveal sky and distant treeline.

Inside, Douglas fir surfaces carry the warmth that the cedar exterior withholds. Natural light is controlled and considered, the forest pressing in from every side without ever feeling intrusive. It is the kind of interior where you notice the quality of light before you notice the furniture.

What makes the Floating House significant isn’t scale or spectacle — it’s discipline. Montgomery resisted the temptation to over-design a site that was already extraordinary. The result is a house that amplifies its surroundings rather than competing with them. In an era when architecture often mistakes loudness for confidence, that kind of restraint is genuinely rare. The Floating House is currently listed for $2.1 million through West Coast Modern.