The Vipp Pavilion is a bookable guesthouse in Lumberland, New York, designed by Johnston Marklee as Vipp's first purpose-built U.S. property and its fifteenth guesthouse worldwide. Set on a 16-acre site overlooking a pond, the 1,200-square-foot residence is shaped by two tangent ellipses that echo the surrounding landscape. Smooth and ribbed stucco surfaces, semi-circular cutouts and a planted green roof define the sculptural exterior while integrating the building with its natural setting.
The guesthouse includes two bedrooms, one bathroom, an interior courtyard and a covered porch arranged around floor-to-ceiling glazing facing the pond. Vipp furnished the interior with its own products, including the V3 kitchen, a travertine dining table, swivel chairs and a sectional sofa. Landscape design by Larry Weaner Landscape Associates extends across the site
Bookable Pavilion Retreats
The Vipp Pavilion is a Bookable Guesthouse Designed by Johnston Marklee
Trend Themes
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Bookable Design Retreats — Architecture-led hospitality is creating premium stays where guests experience a brand's design language as an immersive, reservation-based destination.
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Landscape-integrated Lodging — Nature-responsive structures with green roofs, panoramic glazing and organic forms point to new luxury models centered on ecological immersion and site-specific identity.
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Shoppable Hospitality Interiors — Fully furnished guesthouses featuring proprietary products transform overnight stays into tactile brand showrooms that connect travel, retail and lifestyle aspiration.
Industry Implications
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Boutique Hospitality — Small-format destination properties are reshaping guest expectations by pairing privacy, architectural distinction and curated amenities in low-density natural settings.
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Residential Architecture — Purpose-built retreats demonstrate how sculptural forms, passive landscape integration and compact footprints can redefine the market for experiential second-home design.
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Furniture and Homeware — Branded interiors within hospitality environments expand product storytelling by letting consumers live with kitchens, seating and tables before purchase consideration.