Aura and Jonathan Adler's Smart Picture Frame Collaboration

Gone are the days of flipping through physical photo albums with your family, reminiscing on vacations, weddings and other shared experiences while leaning over a massive book. Now in the digital age, many of us have thousands of photos stored on our phones, many of which we take and never appreciate again since printing them is no longer second nature. 

During our trip to NY Now, we had the opportunity to speak with Abdur Chowdhury and his team about Aura smart picture frames. With the unveiling of the company’s collaboration with Jonathan Adler, it felt like an appropriate time to discuss the meaning of photographs in modern times and how technology can adapt to help us process the large quantity of photos we take on a daily basis. Adler talks a little about the collaboration in the video below:

Aura has been around for some time, developing technology to make smart picture frames look less like this:

And more like this:

The concept is relatively simple. The accompanying app scans your camera roll, paying special attention to people that consistently appear in your photos so it can automatically send future photos directly to them. Aura works quietly in the background of your home or office, displaying images from your devices on a screen that auto-adjusts its lighting to fit with its surroundings. If you want to look back at a photo, swipe your hand across the frame from the lefthand side, and if you want to skip a photo, simply swipe across the righthand side. As a side note, the frame also supports those underutilized “live photos” you accidentally take on your iPhone, which creates a nice subtle movement without being a distraction.

Of course Aura’s success lies in large part within the high-end, minimal design of the frame. Their recent collaboration with Jonathan Adler took this a step further, allowing the combined teams to experiment with pops of color, packaging design and concept. The team’s core design mission has transitioned to include an additional goal of creating a smart frame that integrates successfully into users’ lives, which means a long road of constant tech development still ahead.

The Aura team spent upwards of two years developing the motion sensor technology that sets their frames apart from the clunky “smart” frames we’re used to seeing. Along with motion technology, the frames have advanced facial recognition technology that recognizes people as they age. This allows for better photo organization, as the frame will recognize a person as just themselves, not a brand new person every year. 

The frame’s photo sharing capabilities add social element meant to streamline sharing photos amongst your social circles, almost like an upgraded AirDrop or FileDrop.

In terms of target market, Aura is noticing an interest from young families and, most interestingly, the elderly. It makes a lot of sense when you think about it—have you ever tried to teach an older relative how to use an iPad? They’re generally most interested in photo storage and sharing, so in their minds, iPads and other tablets often have too many unnecessary functions. The option for relatives to directly share important photos with their friends and relatives means little to no work if you don’t understand or are incapable of learning a complex new device.

Chowdhury recalled a customer service call they received from an elderly woman whose granddaughter was in labor, about to have her first great-grandchild, and she wanted to make sure she could receive the photos immediately to her Aura frame. It’s moments like those that reassure the Aura team their design work is more about making technology more intuitive and inclusive and less about the wow factor of another smart object on the market.

Learn more about Aura here, and be sure to let us know your thoughts on modernizing photo organization in the comments thread below. 

Focus: Lisa Cheng Smith, Chief Design Officer at Areaware

Are.na is a collaborative research website that allows designers and artists alike to connect dots and dig into creative interests. This article was originally published on Are.na’s blog

If you haven’t heard of Areaware, it’s still very possible you’ve come across their work—the design objects they produce are found everywhere from museum stores and local boutiques to the pages of the New York Times. Each of their seasonal catalogs is full of original works from small studios and independent designers, many of whom are being introduced to a larger audience for the first time. Lisa Cheng Smith, Areaware’s chief design officer, describes the company as the “connective glue between manufacturers, retailers, designers, and the public.”

I’ve long admired Lisa’s overarching design vision for Areaware’s products, but I hadn’t realized the level of detail, creativity, and critical thought she also puts toward the commercial and logistical aspects of her work. After studying both architecture and industrial design, Lisa shifted from a more conceptual practice to one focused on making good design accessible for the most people—to own, share, and pass down, rather than just appreciate. It’s clear in talking to her that her scholarship continues to inform her work.

In a conversation over email, she makes a case for why thoughtful product design should also have commercial value, and how considering art and commerce in unison can benefit the items we buy, our attitude toward material culture and our relationship with design.

Meg Miller: When and how did you start working with Areaware? What, in general terms, do you do there?

Lisa Cheng Smith: I started as Areaware’s creative director in May of 2014, three years ago almost to the day. My position has evolved constantly since that time. When I started, I was responsible for product selection and development, visual communications, and visual merchandising at industry exhibits and tradeshows. I had a team of three.

In May of 2015, I took on a larger role as chief design officer. It’s not the most descriptive title—I sort of view it like CEO-in-training. I currently oversee sales, marketing, product, and communications, which are all handled out of the Brooklyn office. We also have a Columbus, Ohio-based team that handles accounts, logistics, purchasing, and distribution. I work with them directly, but don’t manage that side of the business.

It’s been very enlightening and humbling to have all of these areas under my watch. I’ve learned so much about the industry ecosystems that products live in. It’s not just enough to make a great and desirable product, you also have to know how to communicate it, sell it, and deliver it. In fact, most products aren’t great at all, but they still do well because all other aspects of the equation are worked out, often at the expense of good design.

As much as I love to set the creative tone and direction of the brand, I have also grown to love the nitty gritty of resource and sales management. I don’t do any sales myself, but I do communicate deeply with the sales team. This provides me with a holistic view of the designs we produce—not just what designers and the press think of what we’ve done, but also how the consumers who are actually purchasing the products react to the choices we made. My ultimate goal is to make design products that designers can get behind and that the public want. To succeed in this is a constant exercise in listening and revising.

When I first announced my new role, a few friends were critical, like “How can sales and design be overseen by the same person? Aren’t they opposed?” I think that’s a common perception, but actually every company has to have someone who can see the big picture. I’m lucky that Areaware has chosen me—someone with a background in design. So often the lead is numbers-focused and the product becomes infinitely less interesting if design is sacrificed for other metrics. On the flipside, I still have a lot to learn about hitting numbers.

It’s hard to walk the line between art and commerce, but I want to enable designers to be represented in the marketplace successfully. I want independent designers to be able to compete with big box design-derivative brands. It’s one way to make a real impact on the material culture of our generation.

Could you expand a bit on the Areaware point of view, or what makes a product an Areaware product?

We are looking to do a few things. We want each product to represent the studio it came from—to have a design process beyond pure form-making or market-gaming. Each product has to be special, beautiful, and original. At the same time, it also has to have commercial potential.

The overlap in the Venn diagram of commercial and original is not always easy to achieve. This usually translates to doing a lot of work to get a product ready for market, because it hasn’t already been done by someone else. We always talk about how difficult products to manufacture are some of the best to make. Even though they require a lot of investment up front, they are very hard to copy.

How do you find most of the designers you work with?

It’s very much relationship driven. I won’t work with someone I haven’t met or at least had a phone conversation with. I prefer to work with designers who have shown that they can reinvent their practices, have a wide range of interests, and can remain self-critical. If you work with someone who has only ever done one good thing, it’s a lot of investment into a relationship that might not result in a continuing dialogue of work.

I also look for practitioners who are flexible in preparing a product for the market. Not all designers are excited to adjust their designs based on sales or manufacturing feedback. This makes it more difficult for us to do our jobs well, and the products suffer commercially. We try not to compromise any design intent, but I can’t deny that going to market with thousands of units always requires adjustment to the original. A small tweak can make or break a product, and we are experts in that.

You went to undergrad at MIT for architecture and then the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) for a masters degree in design studies, concentrating in designed objects. Why did you make that switch?

Designed objects is what SAIC called its product design program, to distance it from commerce. To be honest, this is what attracted me to SAIC over other programs, though I am in the opposite camp now.

I was interested in making design work that was not complicit in the commercial sector. This impulse came from my experiences in architecture—in that field, it felt that doing unbuilt works was an important part of having an impactful practice, because to make a building is a huge undertaking. There was no way to work if you didn’t take on self-driven non-commercial projects. I worked in architecture for a couple of years and loved it. I didn’t so much change as shift my focus–I was interested in approaching smaller scale objects with the same scholarly angle that I learned to approach spaces with.

Little did I know, it is such a different discipline, with a different set of skills, and a different dialogue. Of course there are overlaps, but I feel fairly disconnected from the bleeding edge of architecture scholarship now. Instead, I feel more connected with other forms of design—I know so much more about graphic and fashion design than I did as an architect. When I was working in architecture, I thought architects could design the best version of anything and therefore wasn’t very interested in other fields. Now I’ve done a 180 and really value specialization and the deep dialogues of other design disciplines.

In a way, I care more about architecture now. I’m less concerned with the heroics of form making, and much more interested in what makes a space one’s own. I’ve become interested in this idea of ‘Stimmung,’ a term coined by interior historian Mario Praz. As Witold Rybczynski put it in Home : A Short History of an Idea, ‘Stimmung is a characteristic of interiors that has less to do with functionality than with the way that the room conveys the character of its owner—the way that it mirrors his soul.’

For me, that’s a big driver of working in product design. As the cultural critic and religious historian Michel de Certeau examined in The Practice of Everyday Life, there is a capacity for self-expression in consumption patterns.

After SAIC, you ran the exhibition project Object Design League, as well as ODLCO—its brick-and-mortar off-shoot—with Caroline Linder for about five years. Can you talk about these two initiatives and how they influenced your thinking in regards to design and manufacturing?

In grad school, I was interested in applying design study to smaller objects that could move around the world, be used and misused, discarded and found again. I have always loved little objects and products, not as a collector, but as a pragmatist. But at the time, I was also very anti-commerce, anti-function and pro-conceptual. Now I view this as quite naive, especially given the mundane work I was making.

After graduating, Caroline Linder and I formed Object Design League, a sort of exhibition society. We put on group shows and staged events. This was wonderful in that it brought a community together. Over time, I realized that shows are an effective way to support artists through the sale of their art. This wasn’t as true for product design—it’s much more rewarding (and financially sustainable) when consumers are part of the equation. So we looked for a way to support designers the way exhibitions created financial opportunities for artists. We realized that product design is really a commercial activity at its core and we should treat it as such. So we got into licensing and production.

I’m still in that line of work. Though I am trained as a designer and employ these skills all day in all kinds of ways, I really view myself as a design facilitator. I’m developing a body of experience that will help me bring products into existence and get them into the hands of everyday people.

When I think back to all the design pieces I love—Castiglioni lamps, Enzo Mari puzzles, etc.—I realize that each one has a great manufacturer behind them. Without that, you might see these pieces in books or museums, but you’d never run across them in random antique shops or on eBay. I want people to run across the work I’ve touched 15, 20, and 30 years from now, in antique stores and their parents and grandparents homes.

Were there any theorists or artists in particular that influenced that thinking for you, either in school or in individual research?

I have been all over the map. There are the things that I read in grad school simply because I thought I should, like Derrida, Deleuze, etc. These have had basically no effect on me.

I have also come across things that I can’t let go of. Though it’s fairly controversial for being a white man’s version of Utopia, A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander has been very important to me because it speaks so much about lived experience and the granular detail in how humans occupy their spaces and create their habits.

I also love the writings Atelier Bow-Wow has done on “Behaviorology.” They have an insightful book of short essays called Echo of Space/Space of Echo that discusses experience. There is an essay on cleaning that describes sweeping a corner out with a broom as a way of interacting directly with the tiniest particles of the room. This research informs their conception of architectural space, but for me I think of all the implications of the broom and what that tiny experience should be like.

Though I haven’t read it in a long time, I was very much influenced by de Certeau’s The Practice of Everyday Life. It describes a way to live freely even within structures of control, by using ‘tactics.’ For example, taking a different route home when the city streets are set up to funnel you along a specific path. Or improvising with products in an ad-hoc fashion to give them functions that they were not ascribed by the companies that made them. I am always looking for a way to engage in commerce without being complicit in the negative effects of capitalism. This book always gave me hope that there was a way out that wasn’t a total rejection of industrialized production, which I do believe can have really beautiful and democratizing results at the best of times.

Do you have any personal projects going on at the moment, aside from your work at Areaware?

I should start some! I have been very slowly working on an eBay aggregator project, but can’t really talk about it. It’s been a few years in the making and basically uses eBay as an archive from which users can curate their own collections (and of course bid).

I would like to get into design writing. There is a lot of suspect stuff going on in the design world, but criticism is hard to come by. Design blogs are collections of press releases or cute spins on dumb stories. We can do better. This is the downside of being so commercial—everyone wants to sell sell sell.

What other artists and designers are you influenced by right now?

I reference the initial work Danese did as a brand almost daily. They were flirting with and representing the avant-garde at every turn, and yet were commercially successful. Enzo Mari and Bruno Munari are very well known names in design, but the brand work they did for Danese is amazing and is really not discussed.

*****

Homepage image from School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Link About It: Miranda July's Interfaith Charity Shop

Miranda July's Interfaith Charity Shop


There are some 10,000 charity shops in the United Kingdom, and now—thanks to artist and filmmaker Miranda July and Artangel—there is the first-ever interfaith charity store. The pop-up (which is open from 31 August to 22 October 2017 at Selfridges……

Continue Reading…

NoMad's New MADE Hotel: A design-forward boutique destination in NYC's ever-developing central neighborhood

NoMad's New MADE Hotel


Set back from 29th Street, close to Broadway, the exterior of the brand new MADE Hotel exudes the warmth one will quickly find within. This ground-up build, the first hotel of developer Sam Gelin, seems small from the street, appearing to house only……

Continue Reading…

Batay-Csorba animates facades of Toronto townhouses with angled windows

Canadian studio Batay-Csorba Architects has taken cues from traditional bay windows on Victorian homes for this residential building in Toronto, which has apertures that appear to be slanted.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

The development, called Core Modern Homes, is located in the city’s upscale Leaside neighbourhood. The building occupies a prime site along Eglinton Avenue, slated to become the city’s newest public transit corridor. A light rail line is currently being constructed along the thoroughfare.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

Encompassing 16,000 square feet (1,486 square metres), the residential building consists of two connected volumes that are separated by a large gap. Exterior walls are made of grey brick and are accented with warm-coloured wood. Windows of varying sizes are slightly recessed and angled, creating visual interest and a sense of movement, the team said.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

“The windows on the front street-facing facades reference an inverted model of the traditional bay window, found on much of the city’s Victorian housing stock,” said Batay-Csorba Architects, a local studio. “The perceived carving of the windows further emphasise the monolithic nature of the masonry volume.”

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

The windows also bring in natural light and air, and provide occupants with extended views of the area.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

The building contains seven townhouses, each rising four stories. Blonde wooden floors, white walls and floor-to-ceiling glass help the slender units feel more expansive. Glass is used to enclose staircases, which feature floating wooden treads.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

“Designed with family life in mind, these contemporary residences offer generous living and dining rooms and spacious kitchens intended for the active cook,” the studio said. Moreover, a loft space can accommodate family gatherings.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

Each unit contains three bedrooms, including a master suite that occupies an entire floor. The team also created a private terrace for each residence. “Each residence establishes a continually unfolding relationship between its interior, exterior private garden and the sky beyond,” the studio said.

Core Modern Homes by Batay-Csorba Architects

Batay-Csorba Architects was established in 2010 in Los Angeles and later relocated to Toronto. The studio has a growing portfolio of residential projects, which includes a pair of urban townhouses in Toronto faced with brick and wooden screens.

Photography is by Doublespace.

Project credits:

Team: Jodi Batay-Csorba, Andrew Batay-Csorba
Client: Mazenga Building Group

The post Batay-Csorba animates facades of Toronto townhouses with angled windows appeared first on Dezeen.

Sølø updates recycled textiles with tropical artwork for Jungle collection

Dezeen promotion: textiles and homeware brand Sølø has patterned recycled fabric with palm trees, flowers and dragonflies for a collection of rugs, sofas and pouffes, which will launch at Maison et Objet in Paris this weekend.

Athens-based Sølø paired watercolour paintings with digital sketches to create the decorations for the Sølø Jungle Collection.

“The blend of basic watercolour and digital shapes renders a pattern that truly represents the lush, dense aspect of the jungle,” said the brand.

Bright hues of green and blue form tropical plants and bugs, which are layered over dark backdrops. White markings outline the veins of leaves and other details.

Creative director Ioannis Solomozis designed the series and describes it as a “mix of various elements combined in a way that makes sense as a whole”.

Among the pieces included in the collection is a rug, a two-seater sofa, a pouffe and a yoga mat. The fabric is all reused and updated in-house, as part of the brand’s sustainability ethos.

“We love the idea of the reused fabrics as a simple way to protect nature,” said the brand.

“We use our own in-house production unit to make everything we design, ensuring that our standards of quality, sustainability and ethics are upheld.”

Products in the collection, which also includes a towel set, curtains and a beach towel, are available in two fabrics to make them suitable for both indoor and outdoor use.

A photoshoot of the collection, styled by Miltos Kontogiannis and shot by Alina Lefa, aims to show this diversity, by capturing the products in an outdoor setting against the backdrop of the Aegean Sea in the Mediterranean.

Sølø Jungle Collection will be on display at Maison et Objet 2017 – which takes place in Paris from 8 to 12 September 2017 – in Hall 7 Booth F151.

It will also be exhibited at Decorex International in Booth F30 from 17 to 20 September 2017 to coincide with this year’s London Design Festival.

Photography is by Alina Lefa.

The post Sølø updates recycled textiles with tropical artwork for Jungle collection appeared first on Dezeen.

"These buildings will unfortunately remain on this planet for some time"

Readers are not afraid to make their feelings known about the six projects shortlisted to take the title of the UK’s worst building, in this week’s comments update.

Honours even: Commenters took part in a lively debate over which of the buildings nominated for the 2017 Carbuncle Cup deserved to win architecture’s most unwanted award.

“Of the bunch, and there are serious contenders here, 8 Somers Road by Vivid Architects is particularly ill conceived,” opened a thoughtful Instablographer. “However, I find Battersea Power Station to be the worst of the bunch because unlike the house addition, it is nearly impossible to correct.”

Kay thought it should never have got to this point for the London landmark: “What they did to the elegant, iconic and mighty Battersea Power Station is unreal. I’ve never really understood how planning permissions work, but I sure now know it’s not based on basic good taste”

“Battersea, absolutely no contest. How can the planners sleep at night? Really, really appalling,” added Nigel Howard.

AB5493 had another nominee in their crosshairs: “The Preston train station entrance is truly awful. Looks like a bike shelter.”

“Indeed – it’s aesthetically debauched,” agreed Leigh Hughes.

ArchitecturalDesigner believed awarding only one such prize was not harsh enough: “I think there should more opportunities to name and shame. Maybe this way some architects would think twice about what they design. All of these buildings will, unfortunately, remain on this planet for some time.”

This reader was swimming against the tide with their comment:

Which shortlisted building should win 2017’s Carbuncle Cup? Have your say in the comments section ›


Robert E Lee statue, Charlottesville

Stand up tall: American affairs took centre stage again this week as readers responded to Phineas Harper’s assertion that architects failed to respond to the racist violence in Charlottesville.

HeywoodFloyd felt the opinion piece was out of line: “Inflammatory, hyperbolic statements conflating George Washington’s place in history with Robert E. Lee’s are the exact same preposterous rhetoric that the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville used to justify their actions. If you are just going to stir the pot without offering any critical insight, then keep quiet. In a nutshell, why architects should stay out of politics as much as possible.”

But Geofbob considered it to be necessary: “Phineas Harper’s article is intended to be thought-provoking, and it’s clearly worked with you. As for the suggestion that architects should be more involved in the issue, surely, architects are as entitled to involve themselves in politics as much as anyone else.”

“Many are whining about how the profession is detached from the society. If we don’t follow up what’s happening in the society, can we design something innovative? Or are we just going to stay in our bubble?” pondered thierryL.

“The architects I know spend so much time working to make a crust that they have no time for much else in their lives, least of all politics,” responded Guest.

However, dcbzyxkji decided that there indeed was a link. “Architecture is inherently political,” they said. “Your choice to distance your own work or research from current political realities is, in itself, political. How are architecture and design supposed to stay relevant and continue innovating if we ignore context?”

One reader felt they had an answer for the lack of response from architects:

Read the comments on this story ›


Houston flooded after Hurricane Harvey

Disastrous: Readers also discussed disaster expert Ilan Kelman’s accusations that Houston’s poor urban planning was the sole factor behind the flooding that followed Hurricane Harvey.

With Respect was glad the issue had been raised: “I’d be pleased to hear how the profession plans to respond to this knowledge, when almost every professional today still uses tables last accurate in the 1950s.”

But Matthew Kent Fasken seemed to feel that Kelman’s theory was too simplistic: “Never mind that it was a perfect storm, one that stopped and turned back around for a second run. A 500- to 1,000-year estimated rainfall event.”

Yousef El-berry took a pragmatic approach: “It’s very clear to everyone that the urban planning of Houston is in crisis since there are fewer parks than detention centres, but we also have to keep criticising and mentioning the global warmth as a key of disaster not only for Houston but also for all over the world which we should care about.”

This reader felt that perhaps a softer approach was needed for such a sensitive topic:

Read the comments on this story ›


Not all heroes wear capesCommenters could not help but be distracted by Canadian architect Jean Verville’s fashion choices for the promotional images of his recently completed minimal apartment in Montreal.

Josephine could not take her eyes off the long flowing garment: “Forget the ribbon, let’s talk about that cape.”

Slime was also a big fan: “That cape is so tight.”

This reader knew they could rely on Dezeen’s readers for entertainment:

Read the comments on this story ›

The post “These buildings will unfortunately remain on this planet for some time” appeared first on Dezeen.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office provides a jungle escape

This white-concrete guest house in the Mexican resort of Tulum is surrounded by dense tropical foliage, which can be viewed from above thanks to a large roof terrace.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

Opening this month, Tulum Treehouse was designed by local firm CO-LAB Design Office as a five-bedroom private guest retreat nestled among the dense mangrove jungle and array of palms.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

The white-concrete building is set back from Tulum’s main beach road, where most of the area’s accommodation, restaurants and shops are found, and sits adjacent to the Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

The house can be rented as a three-bed retreat, with guests occupying the upper floors only, or a full five-bed home including the lower level.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

A wooden deck leads through the jungle to a wide staircase, providing access to the front door on the second level.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

Outdoor spaces are dispersed across the property, so most rooms have access to balconies or terraces with hammocks and outdoor showers.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

CO-LAB worked with designer and stylist Annabell Kutucu on the interiors, which heavily feature products by local craftspeople including carpenters Jorge and Rita, basket weaver Rosalinda, ceramicists La Chicharra and textile label Caravana.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

“Light and air flow through tranquil rooms appointed with Oaxacan rugs and bespoke furnishings by Meridian artisans or sourced from Mexico City’s weekend antique market,” said the team.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

Kutucu, who also worked on the nearby Papaya Playa Project resort, paired dark wood furniture with muted-toned rugs and upholstery to create a soft palette.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

The same pale concrete finish that covers the exterior also forms the majority of surfaces throughout the interior.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

The large terrace on the roof has a variety of seating options and a 12-person dining table to enjoy the view from. Pergolas topped with rows of sticks offer shade.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

CO-LAB was founded by Joshua Beck, who worked alongside architect Rem Koolhaas for five years, and Joana Gomes, who has spent time at studios Fr-ee and MVDRV. Tulum Treehouse is operated by travel and hospitality group Slow, and is part of the Design Hotels collection of properties.

Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office

Tulum has exploded as a popular beach destination in recent years, and a variety of hotels and guesthouses have opened there as a result. They include a holiday villa where bedrooms open onto expansive terraces and an art-filled boutique hotel in Pablo Escobar’s former mansion.

Photography is by Brechenmacher and Baumann.

The post Tulum Treehouse by CO-LAB Design Office provides a jungle escape appeared first on Dezeen.

Richard Neutra's Chuey House up for sale as a developable lot

A midcentury Hollywood Hills home designed by modernist architect Richard Neutra is potentially in jeopardy, as the property has hit the market as “a unique development opportunity”.

The two adjacent lots that make up the Chuey House property have been posted on a real-estate site as one listing, described as “collectively ideal for a compound, providing a truly unique development opportunity”.

For $10.5 million (£8.1 million), 2460 Sunset Plaza Drive is being sold “as is”, complete with concrete-slab and wood floors, one bathroom, and private driveway.

Chuey House by Richard Neutra

But the pair of lots, which measure one and 1.5 acres (0.4 and 0.6 hectares), are being marketed as prime development potential. One looks out over the Los Angeles Basin, while the other boasts panoramic views that encompass the Hollywood Sign and Griffith Park Observatory, and the ocean from Newport Beach to the Pacific Palisades.

The glass and steel house on the site was designed by late Austrian-American architect Richard Neutra, one of the most successful and prolific Californian modernists whose projects include the Kaufmann Desert House in Palm Springs.

The Chuey House was completed in 1956 for poet Josephine Ain Chuey and her third husband, painter Robert Chuey.

Chuey House by Richard Neutra

After Josephine’s death in 2004, it was left to her niece and nephew, Gigi and Paul Shepherd, who filed for bankruptcy in June 2017.

The house is notable in its absence from the information and images on the real-estate site, but was captured in 1960 by legendary photographer Julius Shulman. His photos of California’s modernist architecture helped to propel the movement, and the lifestyle associated with it, into the global spotlight.

Among Neutra’s works that have already controversially been torn down include the Maslon House in Rancho Mirage, demolished in 2002, and the Gettysburg Cyclorama at the famous American Civil War site, razed in 2013.

Photography by Julius Shulman, courtesy of J Paul Getty Trust.

The post Richard Neutra’s Chuey House up for sale as a developable lot appeared first on Dezeen.

'Game of Thrones' Season 7, Episode 7 Explained

Game of Thrones S7E07 Explained..(Read…)