DESIGN & LIVING
Architect Harry Gesner
Harry Gesner is a prominent American architect known for his innovative designs and use of unconventional materials in architecture.
Architect Bruce Goff
American architect Bruce Goff is known for his out-of-this-world, eclectic, modernist homes. nearly 500 of them span across the mid-west, of which only a handful remain.
Fire Island Pines Architecture
Known for its mid-century architecture, Fire Island Pines also has a unique past serving as a haven for tastemakers in the 1960s and 70s.
Erik Gunnar Asplund’s Swedish Summer House
Gunnar Asplund built his summer residence on the banks of the archipelago of Stockholm in 1937. He was 52 and at the prime of his career, having completed the Gotheburg City Hall…
Harry Gesner’s Wave House in Malibu
Recently listed for a cool $42.5 million dollars, the ‘Wave’ house has marked its territory as one of the most iconic homes in Malibu.
Andrew Geller’s Antler House in East Hampton
Known as the “architect of happiness,” Andrew Geller’s masterpieces like this East Hampton home, have the ability to spark inexplicable joy.
Marcel Breuer
Marcel Breuer, born on May 21, 1902, in Pécs, Hungary, was a pioneering architect and furniture designer whose innovative works helped shape the modernist movement of the 20th century.
Paul Rudolph’s Manhattan Penthouse
It’s here at 23 Beekman Place in Manhattan where Rudolph resided from 1961 until his death in 1997.
Visionary Architect Nikolaos Xasteros
The futuristic fiberglass home was designed in 1969 by Nikolaos Xasteros for a company named Alta. Only ten examples are left in the world making them extremely rare and highly-sought after.
Architect John Lautner
John Lautner (1911–1994) was an influential American architect known for his innovative and visionary approach to architecture. He was born on July 16, 1911, in Marquette, Michigan…