It is in Chester Township, NJ, for $2.8 million. Built in 1966. (Photos from WSJ)
SneakyPete
Apr 3, 19 6:42 pm
That swimming pool looks rendered.
Volunteer
Apr 3, 19 6:58 pm
Don't know. The article says they bought it in 1992 for $650,000 in a foreclosure sale and had to put a lot of work into it. The concrete under the diving board looks to be not to far from 1966.
SneakyPete
Apr 3, 19 8:11 pm
Yeah, but then has a distinct line where it turns to the finest aggregate platic-looking concrete ever.
Volunteer
Apr 4, 19 8:27 am
The image of the view of the pool through the window in the interior shot also looks hokey. Who has a full swimming pool when the leaves on the trees and shrubs haven't come out? The 'google earth' image of the house does show a pool but it has most likely been 'enhanced' in these photos. Guess an image of an empty pool is a turn-off to buyers.
randomised
Apr 5, 19 4:57 am
Also look at the hedges in front of the white buildings in the exterior shot with the pool, and the white buildings themselves also seem to have been airbrushed, cleaned up. Not to mention those Barcelona chairs and plants in the interior shot.
Miles Jaffe
Apr 5, 19 9:50 am
Here in Paradise the photopimping of real estate has reached PIXAR proportion.
That being said this particular house, and pretty much all of Meier's work, would be better if it only existed in virtual reality.
sameolddoctor
Apr 3, 19 8:11 pm
Does it have a dungeon?
BR.TN
Apr 3, 19 8:36 pm
No, just a shit ton of robe hooks!
Donna Sink
Apr 5, 19 12:05 pm
LOL BR.TN!
BR.TN
Apr 5, 19 5:43 pm
+1
Miles Jaffe
Apr 3, 19 8:31 pm
Teardown.
Non Sequitur
Apr 4, 19 8:29 am
those 2 recessed light fixtures don't look aligned with the window frame. Tear-down.
JLC-1
Apr 4, 19 11:09 am
baseboard heaters?
Volunteer
Apr 4, 19 1:24 pm
Hot water (not steam) circulates from a boiler through 1/2 inch copper pipes fitted with radiating fins which are covered by the white registers along the floor, and back to the boiler to be reheated. I have the exact same registers on my house (1962) as these. Very few problems over 14 years.
JLC-1
Apr 4, 19 1:48 pm
steam? where did you get that? I'm just pointing that a 2.8 million house should be past those ugly things. And they make an awful lot of noise when they start.
Volunteer
Apr 4, 19 2:10 pm
It is a hot water boiler. It is NOT steam. My boiler, just replaced, in a Lennox model which is very quiet. The earlier Valiant model was quiet also.
JLC-1
Apr 4, 19 2:13 pm
whatever, be happy.
Miles Jaffe
Apr 4, 19 3:27 pm
Baseboard hot water, not steam. Steam is a pressure system with radiators. You’d think an architect would know the difference.
It is in Chester Township, NJ, for $2.8 million. Built in 1966. (Photos from WSJ)
That swimming pool looks rendered.
Don't know. The article says they bought it in 1992 for $650,000 in a foreclosure sale and had to put a lot of work into it. The concrete under the diving board looks to be not to far from 1966.
Yeah, but then has a distinct line where it turns to the finest aggregate platic-looking concrete ever.
The image of the view of the pool through the window in the interior shot also looks hokey. Who has a full swimming pool when the leaves on the trees and shrubs haven't come out? The 'google earth' image of the house does show a pool but it has most likely been 'enhanced' in these photos. Guess an image of an empty pool is a turn-off to buyers.
Also look at the hedges in front of the white buildings in the exterior shot with the pool, and the white buildings themselves also seem to have been airbrushed, cleaned up. Not to mention those Barcelona chairs and plants in the interior shot.
Here in Paradise the photopimping of real estate has reached PIXAR proportion.
That being said this particular house, and pretty much all of Meier's work, would be better if it only existed in virtual reality.
Does it have a dungeon?
No, just a shit ton of robe hooks!
LOL BR.TN!
+1
Teardown.
those 2 recessed light fixtures don't look aligned with the window frame. Tear-down.
baseboard heaters?
Hot water (not steam) circulates from a boiler through 1/2 inch copper pipes fitted with radiating fins which are covered by the white registers along the floor, and back to the boiler to be reheated. I have the exact same registers on my house (1962) as these. Very few problems over 14 years.
steam? where did you get that? I'm just pointing that a 2.8 million house should be past those ugly things. And they make an awful lot of noise when they start.
It is a hot water boiler. It is NOT steam. My boiler, just replaced, in a Lennox model which is very quiet. The earlier Valiant model was quiet also.
whatever, be happy.
Baseboard hot water, not steam. Steam is a pressure system with radiators. You’d think an architect would know the difference.
steam