This is the raddest home! I'd buy this in a second.
Orhan Ayyüce
Dec 5, 20 1:47 pm
me too.
Thayer-D
Dec 7, 20 11:14 am
It does make you smile that someone thought this was cool
Donna Sink
Dec 4, 20 4:09 pm
Lok at the window alignment! Masterful!
Donna Sink
Dec 4, 20 4:10 pm
Committed to exposed concrete, even in the closet. AND LOOK AT THIS CARPET!
I see the entire universe in this carpet.
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:26 pm
You could lose a dead circus clown in that carpet.
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 4:31 pm
I can appreciate the dedication to craftsmanship in that 3/4 inch strip of vertical wood boards above the closets.
Donna Sink
Dec 4, 20 4:12 pm
Cover. Every. Surface.
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:19 pm
Great post, Donna. But maybe space out the pics over a few hours? All those colors at once are making me a little nauseous.
Donna Sink
Dec 4, 20 4:20 pm
It's a lot to take in.
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:25 pm
I don't hate that squared spiral stair, I gotta say. (But yes, please take a match to that carpet.)
Peter Normand
Dec 4, 20 9:23 pm
best taken in with a drink
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:16 pm
Give me a call when Urinetown!
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 4:21 pm
love it!
proto
Dec 4, 20 4:40 pm
carpet in the master bath?!?
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 4:46 pm
from the realtor site:
You're traveling through another dimension, into a home of design, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous home whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead—your next stop, the Sherbondy Zone. Distinctive, one of a kind home designed in 1975 by renowned architect James Sherbondy as the family’s personal residence. The home offers a way of life featuring architectural flair, soaring ceilings and designed utility in every square foot. Privacy and serenity abound, tucked in Concordia Woods on a .66 acre wooded lot that is a nature lover’s paradise.
It's another dimension, that's for sure.
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:58 pm
"...designed in 1975." Apparently, good taste wasn't invented until 1976.
tduds
Dec 4, 20 6:13 pm
"renowned" is certainly a word for it.
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 8:36 pm
But it was designed by an architect? How can we say it's bad?
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 4:49 pm
It gets worse...
citizen
Dec 4, 20 4:54 pm
Thanks a lot, Non. My eyes are now bleeding that same exact color.
Josh Mings
Dec 4, 20 5:04 pm
Umm, you mean it gets better.
citizen
Dec 4, 20 5:26 pm
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 5:33 pm
I also match my sinks with my toilet seats. Who knew I was so edgy. (Spoiler, my sink are white).
citizen
Dec 4, 20 5:57 pm
^ But, in the middle of the night, or after too many pints... you do know which is which, right?
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 6:46 pm
Citizen, in that case, the sink has move cleanable surface for the resulting innaccuracies.
curtkram
Dec 4, 20 8:25 pm
citizen, this makes me want drugs to knock me out
SneakyPete
Dec 4, 20 5:08 pm
They stayed married for 50 years. Was she tolerant or did they both just love carpet?
Hunch: the house was a '70s one-off by the architect finally getting to do what he wanted for his own residence. The concrete, the angular forms and fenestration, that stair-- and the more affordable casework and simple interior wall finishes. Not great, but far from the worst we've seen.
Later came the color-blind relative out to 'refresh' things with new flooring and countertops in a palette inspired by Saturday morning cartoons. (I'll bet you can actually hear those carpet and formica colors as you come up the driveway.) But the shell house has a quirky, cockeyed integrity to it.
Non Sequitur
Dec 4, 20 8:37 pm
If the final build had a 1/10 of the quality of those drawings... we'd certainly would have a different discussion. Nothing like tossing your finishes sample drawer into a blender and calling it finished.
For those who don't know, the tag line of Urinetown, the excellent award-winning musical, was "An appalling idea, fully realized."
This house is perfect. Everything, I love. SO fully realized.
Commitment.
2112 Parkland Drive Fort Wayne IN 46825-3929 | MLS 202047878 (talktotucker.com)
This image here captures the essence:
This is the raddest home! I'd buy this in a second.
me too.
It does make you smile that someone thought this was cool
Lok at the window alignment! Masterful!
Committed to exposed concrete, even in the closet. AND LOOK AT THIS CARPET!
I see the entire universe in this carpet.
You could lose a dead circus clown in that carpet.
I can appreciate the dedication to craftsmanship in that 3/4 inch strip of vertical wood boards above the closets.
Cover. Every. Surface.
Great post, Donna. But maybe space out the pics over a few hours? All those colors at once are making me a little nauseous.
It's a lot to take in.
I don't hate that squared spiral stair, I gotta say. (But yes, please take a match to that carpet.)
best taken in with a drink
Give me a call when Urinetown!
love it!
carpet in the master bath?!?
from the realtor site:
You're traveling through another dimension, into a home of design, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous home whose boundaries are that of imagination. That's the signpost up ahead—your next stop, the Sherbondy Zone. Distinctive, one of a kind home designed in 1975 by renowned architect James Sherbondy as the family’s personal residence. The home offers a way of life featuring architectural flair, soaring ceilings and designed utility in every square foot. Privacy and serenity abound, tucked in Concordia Woods on a .66 acre wooded lot that is a nature lover’s paradise.
It's another dimension, that's for sure.
"...designed in 1975." Apparently, good taste wasn't invented until 1976.
"renowned" is certainly a word for it.
But it was designed by an architect? How can we say it's bad?
It gets worse...
Thanks a lot, Non. My eyes are now bleeding that same exact color.
Umm, you mean it gets better.
I also match my sinks with my toilet seats. Who knew I was so edgy. (Spoiler, my sink are white).
^ But, in the middle of the night, or after too many pints... you do know which is which, right?
Citizen, in that case, the sink has move cleanable surface for the resulting innaccuracies.
citizen, this makes me want drugs to knock me out
They stayed married for 50 years. Was she tolerant or did they both just love carpet?
https://www.kpcnews.com/articl...
^ I like this story. They married a month before my folks did in Vegas. Bless 'em all.
Awww. Love this.
This is amazing. Thank you, I needed this
Donna I think you would appreciate https://www.instagram.com/deco...
Hunch: the house was a '70s one-off by the architect finally getting to do what he wanted for his own residence. The concrete, the angular forms and fenestration, that stair-- and the more affordable casework and simple interior wall finishes. Not great, but far from the worst we've seen.
Later came the color-blind relative out to 'refresh' things with new flooring and countertops in a palette inspired by Saturday morning cartoons. (I'll bet you can actually hear those carpet and formica colors as you come up the driveway.) But the shell house has a quirky, cockeyed integrity to it.
If the final build had a 1/10 of the quality of those drawings... we'd certainly would have a different discussion. Nothing like tossing your finishes sample drawer into a blender and calling it finished.
it’s like Mike Brady on bath salts.
^ Winner for the day. Good night, everybody...
This is positively eye candy next to....
http://www.reversibledestiny.o...
That 3D carpet reminds me of a scene with Mr. Pitt:
https://youtu.be/_509Qkome7c
This is where you go if you don't want the carpet see you cry.