Not that I hadn’t wanted to spend the night there, just doing so proved to be tougher than I thought. Likewise, I too found myself writing about it numerous times, but in those architecturally-minded articles that you write from a distance without ever needing to visit. This alone intrigued the public, but when press images were released a fuse was lit and the world went bananas – and I really do mean the world.įeatured in a slew of portals and publications, the Bookworm Cabin made it into every lifestyle and design bible you could possibly think of.Īs dusk sets, the enticing glow emitted from within is just about the most delicious sight you can imagine on a frosty Polish evening. Their plan had been simple: to build a woodland cabin close enough to the capital for a quick escape… and, guess what, to then fill it with books. Accepting its first guests in 2019, the Bookworm Cabin went globally viral when it was first unveiled by its owners, the entrepreneur Bartek Kraciuk and his wife, architect Marta Puchalska-Kraciuk.Ĭlad in wood and covering a footprint of just 25 sq/m, the Bookworm Cabin is an intimate little treasure. To many, the name alone should ring a bell. Now had you been paying attention, you’d know already where I was headed, but on the off-chance you were too busy making merry then allow me to fill you in: my latest jaunt took me to the Bookworm Cabin, a compact little hideout a forty-five minute drive from downtown Warsaw. Well I did, and I’m back – as in literally five minutes ago. Last time round, you may recall, I mentioned in this column that I was going away. Accepting its first guests in 2019, the Bookworm Cabin went globally viral when it was first unveiled by its owners, the entrepreneur Bartek Kraciuk and his wife, architect Marta Puchalska-Kraciuk.
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