Showing posts with label Rudolph Schindler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rudolph Schindler. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 October 2016

‘Kallis-Sharlin Residence,’ by Rudolph Schindler

 

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Austrian architect Rudolph Schindler worked briefly with Frank Lloyd Wright in Los Angeles before breaking out on his own. Immediately after the war, in 1946, in a postwar California still with many shortages, he built this inexpensive home for artist Mischa Kallis (1903-1987) – a one bedroom House for an Artist with studio and living on one level, with guest area below and garage and entry above.

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The architect’s ‘Schindler Frame’ frees up the walls above head height for light and sun through clerestories, and to flexibly mould the ceiling spaces.

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Pasado a JPG por Urbipedia desde archivo PDF 
Origen : http://descartes.upc.es/historiaenobres/index.php?idioma=es

The house was renovated since construction to add a new public space between house and studio, which is now the master bedroom – and it is now for sale!

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[Pics by Tom Zasadzinski/Cal Poly Pomona/LA Times, Architecture for Sale, Urbipedia)

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Tuesday, 28 June 2016

The How House, by Rudolph Schindler

 

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Austrian architect and former Frank Lloyd Wright apprentice Rudolph Schindler built several beautiful small homes around Los Angeles after leaving Wright’s emply, this one –built in 1925 for a man nicknamed “the Millionaire Hobo” – helping point the way perhaps towards Wright’s Usonian Homes starting a decade later.

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This historical masterwork is considered to be one of RM Schindler’s greatest achievements because of the evolution of ideas it engendered, not only for the balance between the interior and exterior environments, but also for his revolutionary method of framing its magnificent structure. Schindler found that the standard system was not suitable for contemporary dwelling and developed the ‘Schindler Frame’ by cutting off all studs though-out the house at door height, “to create a continuous visual and structural horizontal line.”

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Built of poured concrete, glass and cedar boards and windows, all laid to a horizontal grid, the house was for LA a very early modern open plan making full use of its site – it is built on the slop to leave the level part of the site to become the front yard.

You can pick it up for a lazy $2.5 million.

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Read much more about the house at architect Steve Wallet’s site:

  1. RM Schindler's How House, 1925: Part 1 of 4, Introduction
  2. RM Schindler's How House, 1925: Part 2 of 4: A change in orientation
  3. RM Schindler's How House, 1925: Part 3 of 4, Many interesting things
  4. RM Schindler's How House, 1925: Part 4 of 4, Form

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[Pics by Curbed.Com, Kilmer Design, Steve Wallet Architect, WarrenLawson1,

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Tuesday, 23 November 2010

Thursday, 18 November 2010

Pueblo Rivera Holiday Houses – Rudolph Schindler

EXTERIOR1 A series of twelve simple yet delightful holiday houses designed in the 1920s by Viennese architect Rudolph Schindler. EXTERIOR2

Simple one-bedroom houses with a sleeping porch above.pueblo1_thumb[2] And, yes, I did say “the 1920s.” That’s when the “look”  now so popular first saw the light of day, and  the architects who developed it then knew what they were about.

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Wednesday, 3 November 2010

835 Kings Road, Hollywood – Rudolph Schindler

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Rudolph Schindler's house in the West Hollywood of 1920, when neither the Dream Factory nor houses like this existed.

Studying with and working under both Otto Wagner and Frank Lloyd Wright, this was the Viennese architect’s first substantial statement of direction.

Designed for himself, his wife and another couple with whom they shared the timber and concrete tilt-slab built house, each of the couples had their own wing, their own studios, and their own courtyards in the cunningly designed three-wing pinwheel spinning out of a common kitchen.

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Not bad for a house built on the sort of budget with which people today might spend on a new bathroom.
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“The residences of Schindler are intimately related to the earth,” wrote Pauline Gibling Schindler, discussing her husband in a1932 issue of Creative Art Magazine. “Meant for a life which flows naturally from the house out of doors, but which at the same time maintains an intense privacy, they are woven into their gardens and the gardens themselves become rooms.”
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Privacy. Light. Sunlight carefully screened and modulated. Spaces opening up to private grounds, and to each other.  And naturally, all the furniture was carefully designed to complement the scheme (original couch below, not in setting; original setting above, not with Schindler furniture).

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Nothing like it had been seen before in Southern California. And very little since.

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Head to this site and scroll down, and you’ll get a feel for the entrance sequence to the (now empty) house that Schindler so masterfully set up, and much more—including a tiny but fascinating bathroom.

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And to this one to find Schindler’s considered opinion of how much (or how little) the man (or woman) earns whose “imagination must enable him to take a pile of building materials and create an organism which will function and live.”

Tuesday, 30 September 2008

How House - Rudolph Schindler

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Another beauty by Viennese-Californian architect Rudolph Schindler, from 1925 when he first settled in California, in that marvelously creative period between the wars when he helped define the best of Californian 'modernism' -- which said modernists were mostly too dim to appreciate.  Said Schindler in a letter to the Museum of Modern Art in 1943,

   I consider myself the first and still one of the few architects who consciously abandoned stylistic sculptural architecture in order to develop space as a medium of art. ... I believe that outside of Frank Lloyd Wright I am the only architect in U.S. who has attained a distinct local and personal form language.

And so he had.  Frank Lloyd Wright, never one to overpraise a colleague, allowed in references that Schindler "has built quite a number of buildings in and around Los Angeles that seem to be admirable from the standpoint of design, and I have not heard of any of them falling down...   He has a good mind, is affectionate in disposition, and is fairly honorable I believe. Personally, though strongly individual, he is not unduly eccentric and I, in common with many others, like him very much."

Like Schindler's own house on Kings Road, the How house also features concrete, redwood and glass.  Says the Schindler House website of this beauty:

The How House sits on top of a steep ridge, angled to the street, with a gorgeous view of the Los Angeles River. It is one of the best examples of Schindler’s use of geometry and proportion in order to manipulate space. The main volume of the house is shaped as a cube with smaller spaces extending out from it.

It's now on the market, and can be picked up for a modest US$4.9995 million...  [Hat tip Prairie Mod]

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Wednesday, 12 July 2006

Kings Rd house - Rudolph Schindler

Rudolph Schindler's house in the West Hollywood of 1920.

Designed for himself, his wife and another couple with whom they shared the timber and concrete tilt-slab built house, each of the couples had their own wing, their own studios, and their own courtyards in the cunningly designed pinwheel layout.

Nothing like it had been seen before in Southern California.

TAGS: Architecture

Wednesday, 29 March 2006

Tuesday, 28 March 2006

Wolfe House - Rudolph Schindler


Rudolph M. Schindler, Summer House for Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Wolfe, Avalon, Catalina Island, CA (1928-1931), [demolished 2002].

TAGS: Architecture