Search results
Jul 18, 2016 · Schindler designed this two-family house in 1921, while still working on the Hollyhock House. It is an unusual two-family home—four rooms (spaces, really) were envisioned for the four occupants, Clyde, and Marian Chace and Rudolph and Pauline Schindler, with a communal kitchen shared by both couples.
- Jackie Craven
The Chaces and Schindlers shared the house from the summer of 1922 until July 1924 when the Chaces moved to Florida. History. Schindler's friend, partner and rival, Richard Neutra along with his wife Dione and son Frank lived in the Chace apartment from March 1925 until the summer of 1930.
People also ask
What was Schindler's House like in 1921?
What is the Schindler House?
Was Rudolf Schindler a modernist architect?
Who designed the Schindler House?
Schindler designed the structure in November-December 1921 and constructed it starting in February 1922; it was substantially complete in June of that year. Nothing about the house was conventional, neither its materials and construction system, nor its program and its relationship to outdoor space.
Conceived and designed by RMS in 1921 and built in 1922, the Schindler House has held an important place for many generations over the last century who have experienced the power of this special place.
Schindler designed the house over a two-month period, in November and December 1921. There were four distinct phases in the planning process, each a logical development of a theme. The essential plan—a pinwheel—was established in the earliest scheme.
- 835 North Kings Road West Hollywood United States
Jun 4, 2019 · May 16, 2019. Many architects are associated with the modernist style, but Rudolf Schindler may have been the catalyst. The low-slow house he created, known as the Schindler House, has often...
May 13, 2024 · Site Area: 1 acre. Project Year: 1921 – 1922. Photographs: Courtesy of MAK Center for Art and Architecture. I wanted to create a house that was a fitting temple for the spirit, a vessel to contain the overflowing joy of life. – Rudolf Schindler 1-3. The Schindler House Photographs. © MAK Center for Art and Architecture.