• 2 months ago
In 1959, a government employee named Richard Oyler, living in the tiny desert town of Lone Pine, California, asked world | dG1fbDh0QmViQkpxTFE
Transcript
00:00I could be in the living room or wherever and I'm outdoors too, you know, the full spectrum.
00:27That's a wonderful thing.
00:29You can't imagine what it is on a moonlight night here, you know, or a dark night when
00:36the stars are just busting themselves.
00:44Richard Neutra was an architect who studied and was principal in the beginnings of modern
00:51architecture.
00:52Richard Neutra, my father, was on the cover of Time Magazine in 1949, I guess.
00:58And I just made up my mind that this is what I, I want to live in one of his houses.
01:03And I wrote him and told him who I was, nobody.
01:08I knew just by his office that he was a very important man.
01:12And I thought, he's not going to build a house for me.
01:17We walked around the site and he loved it.
01:20He says, this is, this is unusual.
01:23He says, there's nothing else any place like it.
01:27He said that in standing there, he had not seen such a great expanse of open space since
01:33he'd been in the Gobi Desert.
01:37That gave him the opportunity to create with this background setting of the Sierra Nevada
01:42mountains and these magnificent rocks in front, one of the most unique and magical houses
01:49in his career.
01:51And basically it's unknown.
01:54We had this client-architect relationship that got to be more of a personal relationship.
02:03You know, he was so far ahead of his time, 60 years at least ahead of his time.
02:07I think now we look at these homes and we understand them.
02:11This is deviant behavior to build a house like that.
02:14And I would say that it's deviant in a good way.
02:18I think it was the love of my life.
02:22You get on a site like this and you see everything clearly, how things really are.

Recommended