It is much appreciated that you show the insides and outsides, the rooms and hallways, with matching outlines so we know where the doors and windows are, and how they are interconnected. Most other videos of homes show some spaces but we have no idea where we are in the homes. Also, a recent architectural trend is the "barn house." While someone is building something that size, why make it a box when so much more can be done.
Yes indeed most videos show some spaces without giving you any clue where you are in the house: I like to make complete walkthroughs. Showing every detail. Great to read that everybody appreciate these videos : all the positive comments stimulate me to make more content! I don't like barn houses, so no overviews about them...
Apparently several of us really look forward to these videos! You do a great job presenting Lautner's masterpieces. Another home with interesting spaces and surprises. Wish I could walk through them myself (at least, lol). Thank you again.
You're welcome! So great that so many people look forward to all the videos. It's really heartwarmingto read all positive comments, the reactions stimulate me to make more videos. The next videos, about the Krause house, will be uploaded in two weeks. Till the next episode!!
I didn't like the house very much until you showed the original pictures. Man was it gorgeous. It's unbelievable how people put in time and effort and money to ruin something amazing. Thank you so much for the video Jop!
Totally agree that furnishing shown in this video, including the awful helicopter mural, ruin what was an amazing home. Lucky I have several books on JL's work so I have the good fortune of seeing the original design and furnishings. Jop, really appreciate your tours. Thank you
@@michaelsd284 Someone should buy it and bring it back to original, imagine what an amazing holiday home that would be for skiërs and aprés-ski! A real party house lol
Don't worry there are still another 6 brilliant houses by Lautner that will be made into a video to come. Next video will be about the Krause House by Lautner. After that I'm gonna make videos about FLW, Neutra and CSH houses. So many morning surprises yet to come!
Lautner never fails to amaze me! Must thank you once again for your outstanding and detailed walkthrough which really helps bring the genius of his work into focus! Your efforts are very much appreciated Sir! Thank you!
You're welcome! I like making these videos and try to make them so detailed and complete as possible. Indeed Lautner never fails to amaze: more surprising designs will come up in the future.
I love how the site and the embedded structural system create the rooms and the circulation, giving the interlocking forms an expressionistic intensity beyond their practical organic unity. The changing seasonal landscape draws the eye outside to the alpine world, which is very Lautnerian, but when you are outside the house almost disappears! The living room furnishings are ghastly. A total stylistic disconnect from the spaces...
Thank you! A very well description of the house! very good. 100% agree with your comment. You should help me with writing the voice over. More videos will come up.
You're welcome! It was indeed a lot of time and effort to make this video. It was 6 weeks after the previous video. Next video is about the Krause house, hopefully it can be uploaded in two weeks.
Oh how funny: I Live in the Netherlands at other side of the world and have never seen the house in reality. Thanks someone who was never there.. you can take a look in the house you have walked by every day !
Hey Jop, thanks again for another amazing Lautner house. I really do love his later works with more of a structural "art for living" approach to the organic architectural style. As always you have another touch down, thank you for your effort and time in putting these presentations together and the work of the genius on record. G
You're welcome! each video is a horrible lot of work, but I really like doing it. This house is one of my favorites. Next video will about the Krause House, also by Lautner.
Dankjewel, leuk om te lezen dat je video goed vond. De volgende aflevering zal gaan over het Krause Huis van John Lautner. Over twee weken staat die online.
@@SuperJobbel Thanks! I can see some similarities in the living area of Segel and Turner already (I also refered to my copy of "Lautner A-Z" you inspired me to buy). I am curious about whether JL calculated roof heights and angles in Turner for maximum passive solar heating with the south exposure. I know he calculated window and skylight viewing angles in other homes and doing so for heating would be a logical design element here.
@@SenexCanadensis Yes, both the Segel and Turner have cave like livingrooms. I don't know if you can place solar panels on the Turner House and if John Lautner calculated the use of Solar Panels beforehand.
Yet another unique house, perfectly suited to its environment. I love Lautner's solutions to the site, and the curving, organic quality of the house. Then you go inside, and comfort and convenience are not compromised at all. After all, the house must be a machine for living, yes? It's very beautiful, organic, and ingenious.
Yes, haha. Sometimes RUclips don't recommend a video for you so always keep an eye on my channel. I try to upload one video at least every 4/5 weeks. Sometimes more often than that.
You're welcome. I like making videos on delivery. The Concrete Castle will be very difficult to make a video about: it's inhabited by the first owner and he doesn't allowe any visitors or pictures to be taken. Therefore only a handfull of pictures do exist, only a few people have ever visited it, making it almost impossible to make a video about. Still I hope to make a video someday, it considered by many as one of Lautner's best designs. His final masterpiece completed in 1991 before he passed away in 1994.
@@jco3872 The concrete castle is an aboslute masterpiece. I do have the drawings of the floorplan and it looks great... but besides a few pictures, that you can find on google, there are hardly any images available. Most fascinating is that the house is inhabited by a single very rich person who lives as a hermit and rarely leaves the house.. Maybe I'm gonna make a video someday explaining only floorplan, the drawing and using a scale model (like I did with the Henry's restaurant).
@@SuperJobbel as far as I’m concerned you can take your time because I’m slow working my way through your video archive trying to savor it as long as possible:)
This one was very interesting. Great location for a house, and the popout dining room was super cool. I wonder if that thing broke, who could fixit. The other thought I had is that all that concrete is just hanging over your head, you hope they were using good concrete back then. All in all such a creative accomplishment!
The concrete roof is extremely durable, that's one thing for sure. I don't know who can repair the swing out dining room. The house is indeed placed on a marvellous location.
Okay haha. Really great that you're waiting for the next video. I would love to have more frequent uploadings but unfortunately each video is a lot work, so I can't produce faster than this. So each video will take a couple of weeks. I', currently busy with a video about John Lautner's Krause House, hopefully it will be uploaded in two or three weeks.
I've been to this house but we couldn't go inside it's AMAZING I never knew who the architect was (now I do) imo it's much more interesting than the house from "Sleeper" closer in to Denver
Thanks for your comment. Great that you've been to the house and now know who the architect is. The Sleeper House is also very cool, I saw the movie Sleeper a long time ago, but I never been to the house nor the I knew a lot about it, but it looks great.
I saw this house driving up to Maroon Bells many times.Lautner is amazing.I see many of his homes are in L.A. and Malibu and they all have his unmistakeable signature style
That's amazing, but I want to know more about that very unusual motorized dining room... I can't picture how it translates from one position to the other.
That's an interesting one. I see a lot of late-era Lautner there, but I also see some experimental things such as that (vertically) curved orange interior wall. But I don't think this house bends and flows as well as other Lautner designs of this era. I found that pivoting room a bit gimmicky. (I'll bet that machinery and moveable structure is a nightmare to keep in working condition, especially with temperatures in Aspen ranging from sub-zero winters to scorching summers to deal with.) I do enjoy how he constantly played with the elevation throughout though.
For me, Lautner does his best work on an incline and in a warm climate. Here he's got the first but not the second. So mixed results here. Stuff I really like and other stuff I'm not so keen on. But I'd definitely live in it.
I think the house belongs to the better bending and flowing designs by Lautner, still the design is somewhat disrupted by the interior choices. The old interior, of which I included some photos in the video, was much more futuristic and organic, serving the design much better. As far as I know, there were never problems with the swing out dining space.
Wait, this dream house is the same age as me?!!!! I guess I've got no choice then but to get rich and buy it as my retirement home?;) See what your videos do to me, Joop?! You're completely ruining me for other houses! XD Thank you for another great tour guidance.
i drove by this every single day from kindergarten to 12th grade ivee always wondered what the rest of the house looked like! i aslwatys assumed it had a conversation pit
Hahaha... How funny: you live nearby and see it every day. I live in the Netherlands,10.000 miles away and make a video so that you can look inside! Internet makes this world smaller!
I was reminiscing a little about the Bell residence Lautner designed many years ago and I want to share what the owner told me about it. She said they had a contractor do some work on the house by the name of Harrison Ford way back when he was a carpenter, doing some repair work I guess. Small world...
I get many request from people to do the Pacific Coast House but unfortunately it's very difficult to make a video about it: the owner doesn't allow any pictures to be taken and doesn't allow any visitors. Making the house somewhat of a mystery house. I do have the original drawing but only a handful of photos. Someday I'm gonna a video about it... I promise.
02:22 - I'm guessing something like this would never be built today - simply for the prohibitively expensive price of wood that was used for the structure. I doubt it would make financial sense. Only guessing, someone correct me if I'm wrong.
The "conversation pit" is, to me, another way of saying "sunken living space", which was popularized in the 70s. I had a childhood friend whose parents had one, which I thought was the coolest thing. Their home decor taste involved everything in white, with nude sculptures that embarassed me, lol.
Indeed, the conversation pit was typical 1970's thing. This house originally had a very funky 70's space age style interior. I do like conversation pits, dont like white nude sculpture though .....
I can't stand people that are obviously rich enough to buy and live in a wonderful house like this but then stuff it with the most horrible looking furniture. That's just criminal.
I would hate to have to try to clean all those windows especially the ones in the kitchen when you’re cooking it would be impossible to keep them clean
@@SuperJobbel there are a few places, 8:25, 10:50 and 11:18 all in the living room. There is raking light in those vintage photos and it looks to me that rebar is showing through crumbling concrete.
It will be difficult to make a video about the Pacific Coast House: only a handfull of photos do exist..the owner doesn't allow any visitors or new photos to be taken. Just a few people have ever visited.. making the house somewhat of a mystery... I hope to make a video about it someday.
I call these resort trophy homes resource hogs and one reason why so many cannot afford decent housing. Every day this house is not occupied should cost the owner a hundred bucks. One of the existential issues for our society is too many people with the wealth to afford this waste of resources.
John Lautner is the greatest American architect of all time. And, yes.....he studied under Frank Lloyd Wright.....but as in Star Wars lore would dictate......"Now......I am the master."
Fascinating design - Lautner's architecture continues to excite with each new feature! The moving room in this house is just as unbelievable as it is in his other design with that feature, except maybe even better given the setting of this home. I would love to see this home returned back to its original appointments. It looked great with the carpet spanning the main living area and the dome bedroom wall. It's currently too hard and cold inside, which is nothing like Lautner's typical vision for homes.
Yes, I agree with you that this house should be renovated back to it;s original interior design. It's truly an amazing house and Lautner indeed excites with every new design. I'm currently busy with a video about Lautner's Krause House, another amazing house. It wil be uploaded next week.
It is much appreciated that you show the insides and outsides, the rooms and hallways, with matching outlines so we know where the doors and windows are, and how they are interconnected. Most other videos of homes show some spaces but we have no idea where we are in the homes.
Also, a recent architectural trend is the "barn house." While someone is building something that size, why make it a box when so much more can be done.
Yes indeed most videos show some spaces without giving you any clue where you are in the house: I like to make complete walkthroughs. Showing every detail. Great to read that everybody appreciate these videos : all the positive comments stimulate me to make more content! I don't like barn houses, so no overviews about them...
Apparently several of us really look forward to these videos! You do a great job presenting Lautner's masterpieces. Another home with interesting spaces and surprises. Wish I could walk through them myself (at least, lol). Thank you again.
You're welcome! So great that so many people look forward to all the videos. It's really heartwarmingto read all positive comments, the reactions stimulate me to make more videos. The next videos, about the Krause house, will be uploaded in two weeks. Till the next episode!!
I didn't like the house very much until you showed the original pictures. Man was it gorgeous. It's unbelievable how people put in time and effort and money to ruin something amazing. Thank you so much for the video Jop!
Totally agree that furnishing shown in this video, including the awful helicopter mural, ruin what was an amazing home. Lucky I have several books on JL's work so I have the good fortune of seeing the original design and furnishings. Jop, really appreciate your tours. Thank you
@@michaelsd284 Someone should buy it and bring it back to original, imagine what an amazing holiday home that would be for skiërs and aprés-ski! A real party house lol
I love the idea of all carpet everything, but can you imagine how much cigarette smoke the original carpets swallowed in the 80s? ew
@l.s.11 That's a good point. But now in the non smoking era, the carpets can be replaced, restoring the house into it's full glory.
Good idea. It will do everything to spend a ski holliday in this house. I love skiing and I love john Lautner, so a perfect combination!
I was worried there were no tours left. What a pleasant surprise this morning. Thank you.
Don't worry there are still another 6 brilliant houses by Lautner that will be made into a video to come. Next video will be about the Krause House by Lautner. After that I'm gonna make videos about FLW, Neutra and CSH houses. So many morning surprises yet to come!
Although a shadow of its former glory it still has an emotion behind it - fabulous clarity of presentation ! Thanks and cheers from Brisbane
Yes, the old interior was much more beautiful. Great that you liked the video. More content will come up. Cheers from Amsterdam!
Lautner never fails to amaze me! Must thank you once again for your outstanding and detailed walkthrough which really helps bring the genius of his work into focus! Your efforts are very much appreciated Sir! Thank you!
You're welcome! I like making these videos and try to make them so detailed and complete as possible. Indeed Lautner never fails to amaze: more surprising designs will come up in the future.
Wow, Lautner was truly a master of his craft. Thank you for the new video.
You're welcome! This house again proofs again that Lautner was a genius. A video about John Lautner's Krause House will be uploaded soon.
I love how the site and the embedded structural system create the rooms and the circulation, giving the interlocking forms an expressionistic intensity beyond their practical organic unity. The changing seasonal landscape draws the eye outside to the alpine world, which is very Lautnerian, but when you are outside the house almost disappears! The living room furnishings are ghastly. A total stylistic disconnect from the spaces...
Thank you! A very well description of the house! very good. 100% agree with your comment. You should help me with writing the voice over. More videos will come up.
Thanks again for the fantastic video, your explanations and giving us a chance to visit these pieces of art!
You're welcome! Great that you liked the video. It's indeed my purpose to give people the feeling that they have ''visited'' the house.
great desing!! and once again thanks for your time and effort Jop.... you are doing a remarkable job!!
You're welcome! It was indeed a lot of time and effort to make this video. It was 6 weeks after the previous video. Next video is about the Krause house, hopefully it can be uploaded in two weeks.
Stunning architecture
Yes definitely stunning.
the windows and view from the living room are magnificent. gotta love the fireplace matching the curve of the windows as well.
Yes, the interior is beautifull. It's one of Lautner's best livingrooms.
I used to walk past this house every day on the way to school in the late 80’s. It really is cool.
Oh how funny: I Live in the Netherlands at other side of the world and have never seen the house in reality. Thanks someone who was never there.. you can take a look in the house you have walked by every day !
Hey Jop, thanks again for another amazing Lautner house. I really do love his later works with more of a structural "art for living" approach to the organic architectural style. As always you have another touch down, thank you for your effort and time in putting these presentations together and the work of the genius on record. G
You're welcome! each video is a horrible lot of work, but I really like doing it. This house is one of my favorites. Next video will about the Krause House, also by Lautner.
Weer een fantastisch goede video, Jop, dankjewel!
Dankjewel, leuk om te lezen dat je video goed vond. De volgende aflevering zal gaan over het Krause Huis van John Lautner. Over twee weken staat die online.
I've been waiting for a review of this house. Amazing! Thanks.
Yes, two videos about the Krause and Segel House (both by Lautner) respectively, will be uploaded in the comming weeks.
@@SuperJobbel Thanks! I can see some similarities in the living area of Segel and Turner already (I also refered to my copy of "Lautner A-Z" you inspired me to buy). I am curious about whether JL calculated roof heights and angles in Turner for maximum passive solar heating with the south exposure. I know he calculated window and skylight viewing angles in other homes and doing so for heating would be a logical design element here.
@@SenexCanadensis Yes, both the Segel and Turner have cave like livingrooms. I don't know if you can place solar panels on the Turner House and if John Lautner calculated the use of Solar Panels beforehand.
Very interesting, and beautifully presented. Thank you for taking the time to add color and room names.
You're welcome! I like making these videos. More content will come up soon.
Such an unique design; thanks so much for sharing this
You're welcome!
Yet another unique house, perfectly suited to its environment. I love Lautner's solutions to the site, and the curving, organic quality of the house. Then you go inside, and comfort and convenience are not compromised at all. After all, the house must be a machine for living, yes? It's very beautiful, organic, and ingenious.
Jop somehow missed this one. So it came as a pleasant surprise. Thanks.
Yes, haha. Sometimes RUclips don't recommend a video for you so always keep an eye on my channel. I try to upload one video at least every 4/5 weeks. Sometimes more often than that.
fascinating design! thank you for our tour!
You're welcome. The next video is about the Krause House by Lautner. It will be uploaded in two weeks.
@@SuperJobbel thank you! i love these videos!🙃
OMG.. stuning.. !! I didn't hear about this one... Masterpiece.. very complex as well...!!
Yes, this design is also one of my favorites. More designs by Lautner will come up.
Love these videos. Always curiously unique.
More videos about unique homes by Lautner will come up soon.
Just an amazing structure. Concrete will last quite a while. Would like to see it in all seasons
I think to video contains photos of the house during all seasons.
Amazing! I asked for this house and you delivered. I guess Concrete Castle next
You're welcome. I like making videos on delivery. The Concrete Castle will be very difficult to make a video about: it's inhabited by the first owner and he doesn't allowe any visitors or pictures to be taken. Therefore only a handfull of pictures do exist, only a few people have ever visited it, making it almost impossible to make a video about. Still I hope to make a video someday, it considered by many as one of Lautner's best designs. His final masterpiece completed in 1991 before he passed away in 1994.
@@SuperJobbel Ok, That explains alot. There is little to no information or pictures. But its undoubtedly one of the most unique and timeless designs
@@jco3872 The concrete castle is an aboslute masterpiece. I do have the drawings of the floorplan and it looks great... but besides a few pictures, that you can find on google, there are hardly any images available.
Most fascinating is that the house is inhabited by a single very rich person who lives as a hermit and rarely leaves the house..
Maybe I'm gonna make a video someday explaining only floorplan, the drawing and using a scale model (like I did with the Henry's restaurant).
Thank you for another wonderful video.
You're welcome! The next video will be about the Krause House, it will be uploaded in two weeks.
@@SuperJobbel as far as I’m concerned you can take your time because I’m slow working my way through your video archive trying to savor it as long as possible:)
@@d.bcooper7819 Okay hahaha! Thank you!
Thank you, Jop ! 😀
u r awesome man, thanks so much for this detailled insight. Great job !!!
Your comments stimulates me to make more videos!
This one was very interesting. Great location for a house, and the popout dining room was super cool. I wonder if that thing broke, who could fixit. The other thought I had is that all that concrete is just hanging over your head, you hope they were using good concrete back then. All in all such a creative accomplishment!
The concrete roof is extremely durable, that's one thing for sure. I don't know who can repair the swing out dining room. The house is indeed placed on a marvellous location.
Fantastic!!!
Wow, super thank you!
Thanks! I just visited your channel yesterday to make sure I hadn't missed any uploads. You're right on time with another good one.
Okay haha. Really great that you're waiting for the next video. I would love to have more frequent uploadings but unfortunately each video is a lot work, so I can't produce faster than this. So each video will take a couple of weeks. I', currently busy with a video about John Lautner's Krause House, hopefully it will be uploaded in two or three weeks.
I've been to this house but we couldn't go inside it's AMAZING I never knew who the architect was (now I do) imo it's much more interesting than the house from "Sleeper" closer in to Denver
Thanks for your comment. Great that you've been to the house and now know who the architect is. The Sleeper House is also very cool, I saw the movie Sleeper a long time ago, but I never been to the house nor the I knew a lot about it, but it looks great.
I saw this house driving up to Maroon Bells many times.Lautner is amazing.I see many of his homes are in L.A. and Malibu and they all have his unmistakeable signature style
It's called organic architecture. Houses that are shaped like they have grown out of nature. I love this style. Architecture as artworks.
Wow, who knew Lautner built in Aspen. Amazing.
Lautner only made 4 houses in California. 1 in Colorado, 1 in Alaska, 1 in mexico and 1 in Florida.
That's amazing, but I want to know more about that very unusual motorized dining room... I can't picture how it translates from one position to the other.
It moves with an electric motor. But I haven't seen it operating in reality either...
That's an interesting one. I see a lot of late-era Lautner there, but I also see some experimental things such as that (vertically) curved orange interior wall. But I don't think this house bends and flows as well as other Lautner designs of this era. I found that pivoting room a bit gimmicky. (I'll bet that machinery and moveable structure is a nightmare to keep in working condition, especially with temperatures in Aspen ranging from sub-zero winters to scorching summers to deal with.) I do enjoy how he constantly played with the elevation throughout though.
For me, Lautner does his best work on an incline and in a warm climate. Here he's got the first but not the second. So mixed results here. Stuff I really like and other stuff I'm not so keen on. But I'd definitely live in it.
I think the house belongs to the better bending and flowing designs by Lautner, still the design is somewhat disrupted by the interior choices. The old interior, of which I included some photos in the video, was much more futuristic and organic, serving the design much better. As far as I know, there were never problems with the swing out dining space.
For mure personally the house indeed belongs to the better Lautner designs. A truly organic design.
This is amazing but what happens if you're hanging out in the conversation pit and some hits the button?
Ehm... I think you have to run for your live...otherwise you got crushed by the floor of the dining table. Maybe it has some kind of safety device.
Wait, this dream house is the same age as me?!!!! I guess I've got no choice then but to get rich and buy it as my retirement home?;) See what your videos do to me, Joop?! You're completely ruining me for other houses! XD
Thank you for another great tour guidance.
@@ghostbeetle2950 i feel the same: only a John Lautner house will do🙃
Hahaha! My aplogizes. Maybe you will be able to buy it someday. Lucky for me Lautner never designed any house in my birthyear.
i drove by this every single day from kindergarten to 12th grade ivee always wondered what the rest of the house looked like! i aslwatys assumed it had a conversation pit
Hahaha... How funny: you live nearby and see it every day. I live in the Netherlands,10.000 miles away and make a video so that you can look inside! Internet makes this world smaller!
I was reminiscing a little about the Bell residence Lautner designed many years ago and I want to share what the owner told me about it. She said they had a contractor do some work on the house by the name of Harrison Ford way back when he was a carpenter, doing some repair work I guess. Small world...
Haha funny story... I 've read once that Harrison Ford indeed once was a carpenter before he became a moviestar.
please can you do the pacific coast house please
I get many request from people to do the Pacific Coast House but unfortunately it's very difficult to make a video about it: the owner doesn't allow any pictures to be taken and doesn't allow any visitors. Making the house somewhat of a mystery house. I do have the original drawing but only a handful of photos. Someday I'm gonna a video about it... I promise.
They can't all be great.
02:22 - I'm guessing something like this would never be built today - simply for the prohibitively expensive price of wood that was used for the structure. I doubt it would make financial sense.
Only guessing, someone correct me if I'm wrong.
It's a very expensive house for sure, but I think these kind of structures are still built today sometimes....
As someone with a carpet allergy, I can understand tearing it out! haha
Haha...yes in your case it's very wise to remove everything...in any other case it's better to maintain the beautiful original design.
The "conversation pit" is, to me, another way of saying "sunken living space", which was popularized in the 70s. I had a childhood friend whose parents had one, which I thought was the coolest thing. Their home decor taste involved everything in white, with nude sculptures that embarassed me, lol.
Indeed, the conversation pit was typical 1970's thing. This house originally had a very funky 70's space age style interior. I do like conversation pits, dont like white nude sculpture though .....
I can't stand people that are obviously rich enough to buy and live in a wonderful house like this but then stuff it with the most horrible looking furniture. That's just criminal.
To each his own.
The old interior was indeed better
The original interiors were SO much better (aside from maybe the carpet on the wall)😊
I would hate to have to try to clean all those windows especially the ones in the kitchen when you’re cooking it would be impossible to keep them clean
Yes, architectural mastership comes with a price. The downside of living in an artwork.
🥰🥰🥰😍😊😊
....that building must smell and be constantly moisture indoor.
éhm... I don't know.. What do yo mea with that?
colorado has a dry climate, very little humidity year round.
Oh that water damage on the concrete ceiling is troubling
Where do you see water damage? On which moment in the video?
@@SuperJobbel there are a few places, 8:25, 10:50 and 11:18 all in the living room. There is raking light in those vintage photos and it looks to me that rebar is showing through crumbling concrete.
@@phylliscraine Yes now I see it..... I didn't notice it. Do you think it can be restored?
Pacific coast House thank you
untill the next time...
It will be difficult to make a video about the Pacific Coast House: only a handfull of photos do exist..the owner doesn't allow any visitors or new photos to be taken. Just a few people have ever visited.. making the house somewhat of a mystery... I hope to make a video about it someday.
The original interior was a superior design.
Whomever remodeled it committed a travesty. So sad.
I agree with you: the old interior van really great. Hopefully it we be restored and brought back to its original design.
Agree
Amazing house. I can't believe that hideous mural on the bedroom wall.😕
Yes I was also wondering what that the reason was behind that mural : looked like the shadow of a helicopter. Don't know anything about it.
😋😍😋
I call these resort trophy homes resource hogs and one reason why so many cannot afford decent housing.
Every day this house is not occupied should cost the owner a hundred bucks.
One of the existential issues for our society is too many people with the wealth to afford this waste of resources.
Whoever did the interior design should never do interior design again omg this is a massacre to this masterpiece
Agree, they should return the house in it's original condition.
Perhaps my least favorite.
Okay, what you favorite house? I'm curious!
The house is not only impractical, it's ugly AF.
That's your opinion, and everybody is free to share his opionion on this channel. I rather like this house, especially the interior.
John Lautner is the greatest American architect of all time. And, yes.....he studied under Frank Lloyd Wright.....but as in Star Wars lore would dictate......"Now......I am the master."
Haha. LOL Yes! Both were masters and Lautner studied under Wright: but Lautner went even a step further in his organic and futuristic designs.
Fascinating design - Lautner's architecture continues to excite with each new feature! The moving room in this house is just as unbelievable as it is in his other design with that feature, except maybe even better given the setting of this home. I would love to see this home returned back to its original appointments. It looked great with the carpet spanning the main living area and the dome bedroom wall. It's currently too hard and cold inside, which is nothing like Lautner's typical vision for homes.
Yes, I agree with you that this house should be renovated back to it;s original interior design. It's truly an amazing house and Lautner indeed excites with every new design. I'm currently busy with a video about Lautner's Krause House, another amazing house. It wil be uploaded next week.