13 Boldly Textured Homes That Bet Big on Oriented Strand Board

These wood-wrapped spaces take the low-cost material to new heights.

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Architects and designers have long turned to industrial materials like steel and plywood to create long-lasting projects on tight budgets—and lately we’ve seen a rising trend toward oriented strand board (OSB) interiors.

Like its cousins plywood and particleboard, OSB is an engineered wood that was born in postwar America, when many new construction materials were developed. OSB consists of compressed layers of large wood strands, or flakes, that are held together with adhesives, wax, and resin in specific orientations to create stability and strength. Due to these qualities, OSB is usually used as sheathing in walls, flooring, and roof decking—where it’s concealed by other finish materials—however adventurous architects and designers are also showcasing it front and center.

OSB’s irregular wood flakes give it a rough, variegated surface, which can be played up for a lively, unexpected texture. The material offers a unique combination of an industrial, almost unfinished aesthetic with earthy wood undertones. We’ve rounded up a few of our favorite spaces that shine new light on this material that’s usually hidden in plain sight.

A Pair of English Barns Hide Unabashedly Bold and Budget-Friendly Interiors

The interiors of this 1850s threshing barn in rural England are finished in OSB. The material, usually used as sheathing under exterior cladding, reminded the project’s architect Carl Turner of the straw that was once held in the barn.

Photo: Christoffer Rudquist

A Hive-Like Faceted Structure In Brooklyn

A large OSB structure with skylights, a bathroom, an enclosed baby’s room, and a master sleeping alcove dominates Ryan and Showalter’s Brooklyn loft.

Photo: Jesse Chehak

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This Island Retreat Embodies Simple, Rugged Scandinavian Design

Designed by Tham & Videgård Arkitekter, this house is located in the outer region of the Stockholm archipelago. To keep expenses low, the architects opted for a simple gabled design and simple materials—the sheet metal facade and OSB walls within, for instance.

Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

An OSB-Clad Bathroom In A Sustainably-Designed Arizona Home

When Matthew Trzebiatowski and his wife Lisa designed their own home in Arizona, they created a bathroom whose extreme aesthetic matched the area’s extreme climate. The Trzebiatowskis’ bathroom retains the spirit of Arizona heat with its shocking magenta ceilings, floors, and walls. The vanity is anything but—featuring art instead of a mounted mirror—and is made from sanded and sealed OSB, a waste material typically used in framing.

Photo: Gregg Segal

Green Living in Barcelona

Eco-designer Petz Scholtus focused on sustainable and recycled materials in the renovation of this 625-square-foot apartment in Barcelona. The bedroom houses a wardrobe constructed of OSB, which was selected because it contains minimal amounts of resin compared to other engineered woods.

Photo: Carmen Masia Martorell

Explore Namibia’s Skeleton Coast With These Luxe Prefab Cabins

OSB was the right choice for the interiors of Shipwreck Lodge, a low-impact boutique hotel in the sand dunes of Namibia’s coastline. Designed by Windhoek–based Nina Maritz Architects, the 20-bed property was constructed on a $2,000,000 budget that relied heavily on prefabrication to minimize environmental impact, and to ensure comfort for guests in the remote and extremely harsh desert.

Michael Turek

A Tiny Parisian Loft Strikes Industrial Vibes With a Surprising Material Palette

Architect Florent Chagny renovated the top floor of an 1830s building in Paris with OSB, black steel, and a splash of bright blue.

Camille Gharbi

An Architect Revives a Dreary, Prefab A-Frame Cabin in the Hamptons for $300K

In the basement of a Sag Harbor A-frame, Edgar Papazian installed light-colored walls and structural-grade OSB floors. "It’s derisively called ‘snot board’ in the industry," he notes. "But, it is a durable, visually pleasing solution that has aged very well."

Lincoln Barbour

A Snug Garden Studio Makes Room for a New Zealand Family’s Growing Sons

A Wellington, New Zealand, couple loved their neighborhood of Berhampore, but found that with two young sons, they were running out of space. They called on Parsonson Architects to devise a 183-square-foot studio in the backyard of their two-bedroom Victorian cottage. Parsonson outfitted the interior walls, floor, and ceiling with OSB, while structural supports create an artful, geometric aesthetic.

Photo: Paul McCredie

A Porch in Italy Is Reborn as a Tiny Cabin With Eye-Popping Interiors

The OSB-clad living and sleeping area leads to a bold blue bathroom in this renovated home in Albino, in the Lombardy region of Northern Italy. The white fittings and fixtures in the bathroom echo the retro white cabinet handles used in the kitchen.

Francesca Perani

A New Type of Modular, Affordable Housing Is Coming to London’s Vacant Buildings

Minimizing both financial and economic waste, the SHED is a flexible dwelling that takes only one day to build or deconstruct. After it is deconstructed, it can be rebuilt in other buildings, filling derelict structures that would remain otherwise vacant. Composed of OSB, lamb’s wool insulation, and recycled polyester, the design is affordable and sustainable.

David Jensen Photography

The Hill Street Design House in Edinburgh

In Edinburgh’s historic New Town, a Georgian town house had its upper floor redone with black-painted OSB that still expresses its variegated texture.

Mr Buckley Interiors

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IKEA BURVIK Side Table

It's always there for you. Lovely throughout the home and easy to lift so you can rearrange your living space whenever you feel like it. Enjoy every moment with all your favorite things close at hand. Photo courtesy of IKEA

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Cherner Task Chair

Designed by Benjamin Cherner for the Cherner Chair Company, this task chair takes Cherner beyond its classic lounge chair construction into a distinctive task chair that can be used alongside Cherner’s Studio Desk. It is available with or without arms, and includes a base with five wheels, as shown on the right. Crafted from molded plywood in walnut, beech, red gum, black lacquer, orange and white lacquer finishes, the task chair can be used with a variety of different desk styles. With its classic silhouette, the Cherner Studio Task Chair creates a refreshed midcentury modern look that will complement contemporary interior spaces.

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Artemide Nesso Table Lamp

Designed back in 1967 by Giancarlo Mattioli, the Artemide Nesso Table Lamp yet remains very much at home in today's contemporary interiors. Its distinctive mushroom-shaped form is created out of injection-molded ABS resin. It makes a bold statement in modern living rooms or offices in either vibrant Orange or clean, crisp White. Since 1959, Artemide has created a wide array of modern table lamps, floor lamps, wall sconces and suspensions. Technologically advanced, and with styles ranging from clean and refined to sculptural and avant garde, many Artemide designs--especially the Tolomeo and Tizio--have become icons of contemporary lighting design. Photo Courtesy of Moma

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A Flat in Old Town Gdansk

In the seaside city of Gdansk, Poland, an apartment was renovated with a bathroom clad in concrete and OSB. The OSB adds a decorative element, and it was waterproofed before installation to prepare it for wet environments.

Photo Courtesy of Lucyna Kołodziejska | INTERIORS FACTORY

Related Reading:

30 Comforting Interiors That Have Us Pining for Plywood

11 Wood-Wrapped Interiors That Radiate Warmth

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