This house is a conceptual design by Milano-based designer and architect
Carlo Santambrogio. These are actually pictures of a very well done
artist's rendering and not a real house. Not yet anyway. The house above
is part of his glass house series, and this one in particular is
designed to be a "snow house." The grid structure of the house is made
to be modular and can be designed into almost any configuration.
In his "cliff house" design, the house is elevated over a thin sheet of
water, making its occupants feel like they are floating above the
cliff.
The Case Study House Program, a landmark American architectural
experiment, was announced in 1945 by publisher John Entenza in his
magazine Arts and Architecture. The impetus of the program was to
build homes which would serve as model environments for post-war living
using pre-fabricated and industrial materials developed during World
War II. The Case Study Homes were mostly built in Southern California
during an optimistic, challenging and creative era in American
architecture.
The house pictured is Stahl House, Case House 22 -
1635 Woods Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA, and has been featured in
many films and TV productions. Notably "Why Do Fools Fall in Love?"
(1998), "Corrina, Corrina" (1994), and "Crazy, Stupid, Love" (2011).
Lakeside real estate tends to come at a premium largely due to the
impressive view. The Watervilla Kortenhoef, located in the Netherlands,
offers residents a panoramic view of the lakefront, as nearly every
square foot of the exterior walls are glass. This ceiling-to-floor glass
wall design, paired with the fact that the floor is mere inches from
the surface of the water, gives inhabitants an impressive view of the water from
anywhere in the house. The modern design features stairs to a rooftop
terrace where the view is undoubtedly even more impressive.
Perhaps
the best feature of the structure is that the basement level rests
beneath the surface of the water. This submarine level holds the
bathrooms and bedrooms. After all, in a house made of glass, hiding the
bedrooms underwater is the only sure way to get any privacy. The
submarine rooms have glass panels on the floors to offer more up-close-and-personal view of the water.
This hill-perched transparent home plays peek-a-boo through the trees,
but, for the most part, rocks and foliage nestle it in complete privacy.
Located near the ocean in Pittwater, about 30 miles north of Sydney,
the Church Point Home was designed by Sydney architectural firm Utz
Sanby. The firm describes the home as a tree house that offers
“seclusion and sanctuary” to its residents. Concrete pillars made to
look like trees support the house on its hillside seat, much like limbs
act as a tree house's supports, and though the home can seem muted with a
majority of grey and white color schemes, small bursts of red
strategically assert themselves inside and out.
Hardwood floors and a wooden kitchen table set help harmonize the home with its forest location
Leonardo Glass Cube is a glass-fronted brand pavilion in Bad Driburg,
Germany designed by 3Deluxe . Designed for the Glaskoch Corporation and
completed in May 2007, the pavilion is used for informal meetings and
corporate hospitality.
The pavilion features six metre high frame-less glass panels, which are fitted with disc springs to reduce stress from wind pressure.