The primitive hut embodies the mythical origin of architecture — the moment when necessity and imagination first converged to create shelter. It stands as an archetype of dwelling, a structure born from the encounter between human presence and the natural world. The hut is neither monument nor ruin, but a threshold: it marks the beginning of architecture as an instinctive act of orientation and belonging.
Urhütte reflects on this elemental gesture — the attempt to define space with the simplest means, to establish order within the landscape, and to rediscover, within that act, the enduring dialogue between nature, form, and human necessity.







