The walls inside are watershedded and white painted while the floors are
made from polished concrete. Originally, brass rods were a part of the floor,
enhancing the length of the house. Today you still find the original lamps of
brass throughout the house, designed to light up the vaulted ceilings and small
niches as well as the showcased art. A long distribution hallway, wide enough
to showcase art, presents five rooms, each with a separate dressing room, toilet
and shower. From here you continue to the pool and the terrace, where the water
reflects the nature and the building and creates the sensation of endless room.
In many of the rooms Mogens Lassen has designed a light
shaft with skyvision. Hence the name: Sky-Cottage. A unique
piece of architecture in which by Lassens furniture presents
itself as a natural element. Sky-Cottage is designed from the
same principles as the fortress of Christiansholm, in which area
Mogens Lassen had his own house. Each villa is a unique
universe thought to be a harmonic whole enabled by the
construction to integrate naturally with nature and at the same
time offer an almost fort-like protection.