It wasnât so long ago that the humble A-frame house â so named because of its silhouetteâs similarity to the triangular letter â was a bygone architectural relic. These small chalets, which flourished in the 1950s and â60s as inexpensive vacation homes for Americaâs bođŗoming postwar middle class, were largely forgotten by building buffs who regularly waxed rhapsodic about other, more popular midcentury structures.
But in recent years, the A-frame has expeđ°rienced a huge resurgence in popularity, particularly among design-minded New Yorkers seeking refuge in regions outside the five boroughs like the Hudson Valley and the Catskills.
That was the case for Jeremy Parker and Carlos Breton, the owners of what is perhaps New Yorkâs coolest A-frame: a circa-1961 Catskills cabin theyâve dubbed the due to the color of its facade. The propeđrty in the newly trendy hamlet of Kerhonkson, NY, has , with more than 92,000 followers. Parker, a 39-year-old photo studio owner, and Breton, a 38-year-old medical researcher, bought the house in 2015, intending to fix it up and use it as a weekend getaway from the city. They transformed the once rundown structure into a sleek two-bedroom retreat thatâs since become (reservations that average $266/night are booked solid through the end of the year). Its social media fame means that the pointed home has appeared in many an influencerâs dreamily lit photos.
âWe were committed to [renovating the cabin] and we were enjoying the process, and once it was doneđ we just decidđed to put in on Airbnb just to see what happened,â Breton says. âAll of a sudden, it was booked solid.â

Social media has helped propel these often diminutive homes to what is essentially architectural stardom â particularly on Instagram, where A-frame enthusiasts share snaps of their quirky finds across the United States. With their attractively sloped sides, bucolic rural settings and interiors that are often inspired by Scandinavian or Japanese design, these homes are basically engineered to take in the likes on the image-heavy platform. āĩ˛Dedicated fan accounts like , and showcase some of the most stylish specimens out there. A-Frame Dreams, meanwhile, posts exclusively about angular abodes that are on the market.
âOnce somebody buys an A-frame, they start their account, [and] everybodęĻy follows them,â says Leah Bopf, 37, who runs from her (non-A-frame) home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. âItâs like youâre in a club together â thatâs how it was in the â60s, and thatâs how I feel the A-frame community is.â
The enduring popularity of midcentury modern architecture and design is another factor in the A-frame renaissance. As the bold, often groovy styles of that period came back into fashion over the past decade, so too did the clean lines and simplicity of the A-frame. And for city dwellers who want to invest in their own weekend hideaway â or enterprising buęĻyers looking to make some extra cash from a rental property â A-frames are both attainable and practical.
âThe diminutive size, rustic, often do-it-yourself consđ¤Ątruction, and off-the-grid location of many postwar A-frames has endeared them to those exploring alternative ways of living,â writes author Chad Randl in a new preface to his 2004 book đˇâA-Frame,â which was .
For Adam Paiva, who says heâs âalways been obsessed with A-frę§ames,â that accessibility was part of the appeal. He purchased a dilapidated A-frame hâome in the Catskills hamlet of Greenfield Park, NY, in 2015, and has spent the past five years fixing it up with help from his father. (And the A-frame obsession runs in the family: Paivaâs dad built an A-frame for the family in his native Paraguay in the 1980s.)
âI liked the idea of doing it myself, and my own blood, sweat and tears going into the cabin,â says âPaiva, a 36-year-old acoustical engineer. âIâm taking pride in it, and I like the working-hard-to-make-it-mine aspect of it.â
Paiva has been living in his A-frame full time during the coronavirus pandemic, and has used lockdown as an opportunity to accelerate his renovation, which has included creating a new, lofted bedroom and gutting the kitchen. âThe A-frame is a blessing and a curse,â he says. đâDealing with the angled walls just makes all of it more challenging. I have basicallyđ one wall to put up art, so I have to be very selective on what to hang. Thereâs just not many flat areas to use. It makes setting up my furniture kind of tricky. But for me itâs worth it, because I like it so much.â

The A-frameâs newfound renown, however, cuts both ways: The homes are getting more visibility than ever, which makes them harder to snag when they come onto the ęĻēmarket. According to Megan Brenn-White, a broker at Keller Williams Realty Hudson Valley North, these houses move fast in the already-hot upstate real estate scene, and potential buyers should be prepared to pay a premium because theyâre so popular.
âYou take whatâs happening in this market,â Brenn-White, 46, says, âand then you give it steroids when you have something thatâs a particular architectural style that has a tđon of people who love it right now.â
Appraisals for these properties can also get complicated. âThe appraâiser could go in and be like, âThis is dumb. This living room is oddly shaped. Where are you putting a sofa?â â Brenn-White adds. âBut an actual buyer might value something that looks like an A-frame at $100,000 more than something that would have the similar square footage and bedroomđĻšs and bathrooms â because it looks so cool. To someone whoâs buying a weekend home, that could be worth a lot of money.â

Another thing to consider: The characteristics that make A-frames so buzzy â the cool shape, the architectural history and the intangible nostalgia factor â can also make them tricky DIY projects. âThere are certain things about A-frames that people either love or hate,â Bopf says. âSometimes the kitchens are really small,đ§ and people can relate with each other when they have to deal with those quirks of the home.â
Parker and Breton of the Black A-Frame chose to compleęĻŦtely gut and reconfigure their house, turning a structure that was âin really terrible shapeâ into a super-stylish sanctuary. âFđšor us, it was a learning experience because itâs not a simple square house,â says Parker. âThereâs a lot of challenges that you have to incur with the angles of the roof. We had a contractor who was chill and able to work with us, but Carlos and I were in there like crazy, doing as much of the work as we could ourselves. It was definitely a very hands-on project.â

It can also be tough to make A-frames work as a family home. Architect Edgar Papazian bought a Hamptons A-frame in 2013 with his wife, Michelle, and spent several months â and about $300,000 â making it livable for their family of four. That included removing an enclosed porch that had been tacked on illegally, adding insulation (which is often missing from midcentury A-frames) and finishing a basement, which holds the homeâs three bedrooms. âWe were able to basically maximize the square footage of the original A-frame house so that every function and every use can be accommodated,â says Papazian, 47. His family’s “triangle house” in Sag Harbor was featured in a 2018 book, “.”
But even with those foibles, A-frame owners have no regrets about pulling the trigger on their square foot-starvđ ˇed purchases. âItâs a place [where] you are always interacting,â Papazian explains. âWe have a 9-year-old and a 5-year-old, and especially during this whole coronavirus situation, weâve been in the same room all day, every day for the past four months. I think itâs brought us closer in a way that people who live in typical suburban houses arenât necessarily.â
Parker and Bretonâs A-frame days will soon be coming to ađĻn end: The couple earlier this spring, and recently accepted an offer on the house that they say is âwell overâ the asking price of $595,000. âWe got to be so busy with other things that we started to rent it more and more, and then it just started tođļ become more of a full-time rental situation,â Parker says.
But theyâre hopeful tę§hat the new owners will keep the cabin â and the community thatâs sprung up around it â alive.
âWeâve given so much love to that space, thereâs literally I donât think thereâs đ¯anything more that we could do,â Parker says. âItâs kind of perfect.â