Defying gravity: 13 homes that float in mid-air

Properties that play with the laws of physics

<p>bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless</p>

bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless

If four walls and a white picket fence feel a little too pedestrian, how about a dwelling that defies the laws of physics?

From mind-bending houses that seem to float in mid-air to precarious properties that cantilever over their surroundings, these incredible, gravity-defying homes are tearing up the rulebook when it comes to residential design.

Read on and prepare to be amazed...

AirLoft, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

<p>Peter / Airbnb</p>

Peter / Airbnb

As quirky as it is bizarre, this futuristic home is truly one-of-a-kind. Known as AirLoft, the precariously balanced building lies in the town of Göppingen in the German state of Baden-Württemberg.

AirLoft, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

<p>Peter / Airbnb</p>

Peter / Airbnb

Sadly, we don't know which genius architect designed the incredible home, or how it came to be formed, but it likely features reinforced-concrete foundations and steel support beams, to keep it grounded.

Shaped a little like a megaphone, it has one narrow leg and a large, egg-shaped top. A huge window with sliding glass doors connects the interior spaces with the idyllic garden outside. At the same time, a towering Perspex staircase at the side provides access to the floating living areas.

AirLoft, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

<p>Peter / Airbnb</p>

Peter / Airbnb

Inside, you'll find a living space and kitchen. The bedroom comes with a see-through bathroom, so this holiday home isn't for the modest – and we're not even sure what to say about the circular bed.

Finally, on the ground, you'll find a Perspex box where you can sit in an egg chair and wile away the hours. How's that for unusual?

The Black Line House, Catalonia, Spain

<p>Cristina / Airbnb</p>

Cristina / Airbnb

With its solid, balancing forms, The Black Line House looks like it might just fall down like a stack of Jenga blocks. However, this amazing modern home is going nowhere thanks to clever engineering and precision construction.

The Black Line House, Catalonia, Spain

<p>Cristina / Airbnb</p>

Cristina / Airbnb

The unique property is located in the Spanish city of Olot, Catalonia, on the slope of a volcano. It was designed by the team at RCR Aquitectes and, according to the property's official website, the main objective was to create a property that suited its sloping site and offered its occupants excellent views.

At the same time, the architects wanted to reserve as much garden as possible, so an impressive cantilevered design was proposed. This shape would allow for an ample interior, without compromising on the exterior space.

The Black Line House, Catalonia, Spain

<p>Cristina / Airbnb</p>

Cristina / Airbnb

The luxurious designer villa combines elegance and minimalism, with simple living spaces that don't take away from that all-important view. There's a sitting room, a kitchen, three bedrooms and three bathrooms.

Design-wise, the home is certainly avant-garde, with clean lines, barely there furnishings and plenty of black accents. Outside, under the home's mind-bending cantilevers, you'll find a glistening swimming pool.

Lauriston House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects</p>

Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects

Bold and daring, Lauriston House was designed in response to the property’s rural surroundings. Cantilevering over the uneven terrain, the stunning Australian home seems to glide above its site near Kyneton, Victoria, barely grazing the ground.

Built in 2016, the most wow-factor feature has to be the undulating roof, which reflects the surrounding hills.

Lauriston House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects</p>

Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects

Designed by Seeley Architects and photographed by Peter Hyatt, floor-to-rafter glass walls and clever lighting create the illusion of an effortlessly floating roof, unmoored from the main residence.

Stretching a vast 4,090 square feet (380sqm), the exterior of the property is made from steel, while warm wooden cladding on the underside of the roof reflects the light.

Lauriston House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects</p>

Peter Hyatt, Artist Photographer / Seeley Architects

Inside, the roof is no less spectacular. In this stunning living room, the curved structure takes on the appearance of a canopy rippling in the wind, drawing views of the treetops inside.

It’s not all style over substance though  a sleek and streamlined wood-burner ensures the home remains warm and cosy in the cooler months, while a courtyard to the east offers the perfect spot to soak up the summer sun.

House in the Orchard, Prague, Czechia

<p>Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects</p>

Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects

Nestled on a northern, inclined plot in Prague, Czechia, this remarkable home was designed to suit its beautiful but challenging site.

The orchard featured six full-grown trees, which could not be removed, so architect Jan Šépka of Šépka Architects proposed building a smaller family home that wouldn't take up too much land.

House in the Orchard, Prague, Czechia

<p>Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects</p>

Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects

Known as the House in the Orchard, or Dům v sadu locally, the quirky property seems to float in mid-air, thanks to its long and thin concrete foot, which is anchored into the steeply sloping ground. The property itself was crafted from wood, while reinforced concrete foundations ensure it remains secure for decades to come.

Besides the influence of the garden itself, the orientation and incline of the plot also had a significant impact on the shape and layout of the pad. For example, the living room was positioned to face the valley of the Brook Rokytka. Other rooms are orientated to the east and south. ​

House in the Orchard, Prague, Czechia

<p>Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects</p>

Tomas Maly / Šépka Architects

The ground plan of the building proceeds from a circle, which, on the south side, changes to two squares. This is where the bedrooms, kitchen and social spaces are located. With their rotund walls, narrow forms and high, sloping ceilings, the rooms are cosy but stylish, finished with elegant exposed timber, large sheets of glass and modern furnishings.

Polyurethane insulation also keeps the interior warm all year round. Plus, thanks to the home's position, many of the rooms enjoy lovely views across the surrounding landscape.

OZ House, California, USA

<p>Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects</p>

Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects

Perched on a hilltop in the town of Atherton, California, this vast family home is nothing short of spectacular.

The work of Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects, multiple cantilevered storeys jut out from its sleek modern structure, with the elevated volumes capturing breathtaking views of the distant San Francisco skyline.

OZ House, California, USA

<p>Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects</p>

Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects

Designed as two overlapping L structures, overhangs, courtyards and intersecting spaces define the architecture of the three-storey residence.

The beautiful basement features large open living rooms and informal family areas, while the storey above is reserved for formal entertaining, as well as accommodating the kitchen and dining zones.

OZ House, California, USA

<p>Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects</p>

Bruce Damonte / Stanley Saitowitz | Natoma Architects

Swathes of glass span entire lengths of the property and illuminate the interior, while carefully positioned skylights channel light into dark corners.

Upstairs, the top level houses the bedrooms, with the L-shaped wing cantilevering out across the northern and eastern aspects. A complex collection of geometries, this incredible home is nothing short of an architectural marvel.

Cedarvale Ravine House, Toronto, Canada

<p>Shai Gil  / Drew Mandel Architects</p>

Shai Gil / Drew Mandel Architects

Located on the edge of the Toronto Cedarvale Ravine in a residential neighbourhood, this next property certainly isn’t a cookie-cutter suburban home. Built in 2011, Drew Mandel Architects designed the structure to make the most of the available space in the tight plot.

A black zinc-clad volume bisects the main stone structure and floats above the garden, adding an additional living space while freeing up valuable square footage below for a lap pool.

Cedarvale Ravine House, Toronto, Canada

<p>Tom Arban Photography / Drew Mandel Architects</p>

Tom Arban Photography / Drew Mandel Architects

Encompassing 3,250 square feet (302sqm), the home’s accommodation is arranged around an inner courtyard.

A bridge offers access to a living roof that contains a vegetable garden where the family grow produce, while trees and foliage have been planted in the backyard  all done to support the local conservation authority’s efforts to renaturalise the land around the ravine.

Cedarvale Ravine House, Toronto, Canada

<p>Tom Arban Photography / Drew Mandel Architects</p>

Tom Arban Photography / Drew Mandel Architects

From the ground floor living room, the cantilever looks especially impressive, hovering above the reflective pool like a mirage.

The volume’s black cladding extends inside, framing the contemporary kitchen and dining space and creating a visual connection between indoors and out.

The Pole House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Stayz (Expedia Group)</p>

Stayz (Expedia Group)

Talk about a cliffhanging home! With 180-degree views of Fairhaven Beach in Australia, the Pole House sits 131 feet (40m) above ground, seemingly floating in mid-air supported by steel stilts and accessed via a 76-foot-long (23m) walkway.

The Pole House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Stayz (Expedia Group)</p>

Stayz (Expedia Group)

It's one of the most recognisable houses on the Great Ocean Road and draws photographers and architecture fans in to admire its gravity-defying beauty.

With one bedroom and one bathroom, which have incredible views of 30 miles (48km) of stunning coastline, it's the perfect vacation home.

The Pole House, Victoria, Australia

<p>Stayz (Expedia Group)</p>

Stayz (Expedia Group)

It was originally designed and built in the 1970s by architect Frank Dixon and still holds a lot of retro appeal, with curved walls of wooden cladding and a futuristic suspended firepit.

The building had fallen into disrepair but was beautifully restored by Franco Fiorentini from F2 Architecture. A few modern touches were added, like the glass balustrade and retractable glass walls, to make this a gorgeous marriage of old and new.

Headland House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson</p>

Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson

Set on a hill within 150 acres (61ha) of land overlooking Werri Beach in New South Wales, the innovative Headland House offers its residents incredible panoramas of both the peaceful surrounding farmland and the coast.

The metallic U-shaped structure wraps around a central courtyard, with extended volumes at either end of the property cantilevering out over the hillside.

Headland House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson</p>

Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson

Designed by architecture firm Atelier Andy Carson, the four-bedroom house appears to float on the headland, which also contains pastures, paddocks and sheds for the dairy cows that roam the hill.

Swathes of glass line the interior of the home’s cantilevered volumes  the perfect vantage point to soak up the breathtaking vistas.

Headland House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson</p>

Michael Nicholson / Atelier Andy Carson

Sheltering a tranquil swimming pool and a terrace, the incredible central courtyard at the heart of the property is no less impressive, creating a private oasis to relax and unwind.

Elsewhere, a covered outdoor passage connects the stylish open-plan living spaces to the bedroom wing, balancing the need for privacy with an airy, sociable layout. The property also offers a guest cottage, clad in the same corrugated black metal as the main home.

The Balancing Barn, Suffolk, UK

<p>MVRDV</p>

MVRDV

Set in the middle of the English countryside, the eye-popping Balancing Barn was designed by architecture practice MVRDV and is anything but a traditional agricultural structure.

A far cry from farmyard, the modern barn has a distinctly modern twist with its reflective metal cladding and invisible support system.

The Balancing Barn, Suffolk, UK

<p>MVRDV</p>

MVRDV

In a cleverly engineered optical illusion, half of the building appears to dangle off the steep slope, floating above the grassy verge below. For those with a head for heights, there’s even a swing attached to the underside of the cantilever.

This gravity-defying design is made possible thanks to the building’s strong, concrete core and the use of denser materials in the section that rests on the ground – a pretty ingenious balancing act.

The Balancing Barn, Suffolk, UK

<p>MVRDV</p>

MVRDV

The outside of the mirrored home is covered in reflective metal sheeting, while the inside features large windows set into the walls, ceiling and floor, offering dizzying views of the hillside below.

Elsewhere there are four bedrooms, each with their own bathroom, along with a kitchen, living room and dining room, plus a hidden staircase that gives access to the garden.

Stamp House, Queensland, Australia

<p>Luxury Holidays / Airbnb</p>

Luxury Holidays / Airbnb

Nestled in northern Queensland’s tropical rainforests, this has to be one of the most futuristic homes we’ve seen yet. At first glance, Stamp House appears to float on the surface of a lake.

In fact, the otherworldly structure cantilevers out from the shoreline thanks to an innovative and complex design by Charles Wright Architects.

Stamp House, Queensland, Australia

<p>Luxury Holidays / Airbnb</p>

Luxury Holidays / Airbnb

Built for a stamp collector, the amazing concrete home features an indented façade that resembles its namesake.

Not just an aesthetic choice, the cantilevered structure was chosen to withstand the powerful cyclones that often sweep through the region, reducing the chances of flooding by elevating the home off the ground.

Stamp House, Queensland, Australia

<p>Luxury Holidays / Airbnb</p>

Luxury Holidays / Airbnb

Functioning completely off-grid, the home’s interior is an impressive geometry of concrete beams, with a living area, kitchen and dining zone framed beneath a vaulted ceiling.

Leading off from the main communal space, the bedrooms are located in private wings, while a swimming pool sits in an open courtyard at the heart of the home. There's no wonder the property is now a luxe Airbnb.

Dune House, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Denmark

<p>bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless</p>

bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless

Nestled in Denmark’s Holmsland Dunes, the aptly-named Dune House, which is still under construction, is destined to turn heads.

Designed by Studio Viktor Sørless for a client in search of a cinematic home, the breathtaking property is elevated off the ground, cantilevering over the coastal landscape from a single narrow base.

Dune House, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Denmark

<p>bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless</p>

bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless

With nothing but rugged dunes as far as the eye can see, the contemporary retreat enjoys uninterrupted views of the wilderness.

Inspired by the Roman Polanski film The Ghost Writer, the architectural gem comprises a cross-shaped structure, with swathes of glazing lining the longest wing of the property.

Dune House, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Denmark

<p>bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless</p>

bloomimages / Studio Viktor Sørless

In the living room, the seamless floor-to-ceiling windows are the real stars of the show, drawing the stunning vistas inside to merge with the home’s sleek, minimalist interior.

The central column of the property will accommodate a lift and gallery, while the other three segments of the upper storey will house a dining room, bedrooms and a kitchen. We can't wait to see the finished result, can you?

Hill House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects</p>

Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects

This is one home that isn’t short of wow-factor. From a distance, Hill House, which is found in Melbourne’s northern suburbs, looks like a long black volume balanced on a verdant hill.

In fact, an innovative family home lies hidden from the world beneath the seemingly grassy incline.

Hill House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects</p>

Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects

Oriented north, the property and its garden were once doomed to darkness all year round. To remedy this, Austin Maynard Architects built a new structure facing the sun in what was once the backyard.

In response to the increasing number of high-rise builds in Melbourne, often with little or no outdoor areas, the home’s green space was extended up onto its walls.

Hill House, New South Wales, Australia

<p>Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects</p>

Nic Granleese / Austin Maynard Architects

Previously light-starved, the interior is now bright and airy with sunlight also providing solar energy for use throughout the home. The layer of synthetic grass that clads the lower storey also provides insulation, ensuring the living spaces are warm and cosy all year round.

Unsurprisingly, this daring design picked up a residential architectural award for its unusual form.

Anders Mountain Suites, South Tyrol, Italy

<p>Holidu / Airbnb</p>

Holidu / Airbnb

Situated in the heart of the Dolomites, in the Italian Alps, Anders Mountain Suites is a truly awe-inspiring retreat.

Set at an altitude of 6,069 feet (1,850m), the ultra-modern building was designed by South Tyrolean architect, Martin Gruber, and was curated to cut a distinctive shape, without drawing attention to itself, while also gently blending in with the surrounding landscape.

Anders Mountain Suites, South Tyrol, Italy

<p>Holidu / Airbnb</p>

Holidu / Airbnb

Defined by its organic design and clear lines, the building boasts a curving, solid wood base with a wide and flat concrete top. Akin to a table, the property's cantilevered platform appears to be balancing.

It's really no wonder this remarkable property was a Big See Architecture Award winner in 2024.

Anders Mountain Suites, South Tyrol, Italy

<p>Holidu / Airbnb</p>

Holidu / Airbnb

The two-storey building contains a living room, a kitchen, one bedroom and one bathroom, making it perfect for two people. There’s also a private outdoor terrace and a sauna.

Plus, thanks to the home’s design and endless windows, any lucky occupant gets to enjoy beautiful views of the surrounding mountains.