A Virtual Look Into Richard Neutra's Unbuilt Case Study House #13, The Alpha House
Of the four homes designed by Richard Neutra for the Case Study Houses program, post-war thought experiments commissioned by Arts & Architecture, only one was ever realized. In the imaginary village of the program's many unbuilt homes, next to #6, the Omega house, stands #13, named Alpha. Archilogic?s 3D model gives us a unique chance to experience this innovative concept home.
Courtesy of Archilogic
Of the four homes designed by Richard Neutra for the Case Study Houses program, post-war thought experiments commissioned by Arts & Architecture, only one was ever realized. In the imaginary village of the program's many unbuilt homes, next to #6, the Omega house, stands #13, named Alpha. Archilogic?s 3D model gives us a unique chance to experience this innovative concept home.Each of Neutra?s projects was designed for a family of five, and each reveals his psychoanalytic approach to architecture, in which the house itself is an intimate part of family relationships, as important as the personalities involved. (Neutra was personally acquainted with Freud, and a committed follower of birth trauma theorist Otto Rank.) Underlining this Freudian view, his imaginary clients are not just neighbours?they are related; Mrs Alpha being sister to Mrs Omega.The magazine?s introduction of the Alpha house avows: ?Together these people had decided on a most favourable scheme, to settle themselves side by side??which of course provides the architect with an excu...
Courtesy of Archilogic
Of the four homes designed by Richard Neutra for the Case Study Houses program, post-war thought experiments commissioned by Arts & Architecture, only one was ever realized. In the imaginary village of the program's many unbuilt homes, next to #6, the Omega house, stands #13, named Alpha. Archilogic?s 3D model gives us a unique chance to experience this innovative concept home.Each of Neutra?s projects was designed for a family of five, and each reveals his psychoanalytic approach to architecture, in which the house itself is an intimate part of family relationships, as important as the personalities involved. (Neutra was personally acquainted with Freud, and a committed follower of birth trauma theorist Otto Rank.) Underlining this Freudian view, his imaginary clients are not just neighbours?they are related; Mrs Alpha being sister to Mrs Omega.The magazine?s introduction of the Alpha house avows: ?Together these people had decided on a most favourable scheme, to settle themselves side by side??which of course provides the architect with an excu...
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