Their RV wasn't up to code. Built Invisible Home instead
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- Опубліковано 27 тра 2022
- Film producers Chris and Roberta Hanley (American Psycho, Virgin Suicides) dropped a tiny prefab onto their Joshua Tree land to use as their desert home, but the town told them that the 12-foot-wide trailer was too skinny, so the couple went bold and created a mirrored home that looks like a fallen skyscraper and that disappears as the day progresses.
After walking the property for months, and becoming captivated by the cactus, wildflowers and tiny lichen, Chris Hanley wanted a home that wouldn’t disrupt this delicate landscape. After being told that the prefab was too narrow and could be considered an ADU for something bigger, Hanley and his architect friend Tomas Osinski (they worked together on American Psycho and Spring Breakers) created a “vertical skyscraper” that didn’t require grading. “They were giving us $500 per month penalties and I talked to the inspector and he said, ‘Look, just build another house and we’ll forget about you.’ So Tomas and I thought, ‘Wow, it would be really good to do nothing.’” explains Hanley, “but as long as we have to do something, he said, ‘Well, if we put all the weight on one side, we can not dig into the ground as much so half the house can be lifted.’”
With its huge cantilever, half of the house rests on just concrete pillars. “We didn’t change anything around it,” explains Osinski. “So there’s no grading, there’s no modification of the terrain, we just dropped it there practically.”
The long, skinny mirrored home has been nicknamed “Vertical Skyscraper”, a nod to Hanley’s childhood in New York City, but Hanley’s name for the home is “Invisible House”. All four walls of the home are floor-to-ceiling windows, but despite reflecting the surrounding desert, they’re not mirrors, but solar controlled glass (“solar-cooled, Vitro, PPG, low E glass”) which Tomas showed us didn’t heat up even with the 100-degree July day. They don't have a problem with birds hitting the glass since, as Osinski explains, birds in the desert mostly just walk from bush to bush ( @18:25 he talks about birds).
Hanley - who founded Intergalactic Music, Inc and in the ‘80s, recorded artists like The Ramones, Blondie and Afrika Bambaataa - once played music with Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol used to “send people over” to the studio so to complement his see-through house, he was gifted a translucent guitar that was once used by Aerosmith’s Joe Perry.
Tomas Osinski: www.tomasosinski.com/
On *faircompanies: faircompanies.com/videos/invi... - Навчання та стиль
As a California resident, it irritates me to no end that the state still forces people to build more house than the need and waste scarce resources to meet antiquated buildings codes. Sadly, my post work home will not be in California. California used to be forward thinking but seems to be mired in layers of regulation not adapting to the changes for average citizens and the climate. Balance is best!!! Thanks for the video.
You would think California would be at the forefront of housing progress. We need a total overhaul of building codes in this country. They are designed so that everyone gets a little cut, and the home ends up costing 3 times what it should, or could, and is no safer.
You didn't listen carefully - 07:17.
@@waldemarsikorski4759 Buzz off!!! I listened to the whole video. 1) The couple in the video were expressing their opinions and talking over each other. 2) I did not call out a particular item. 3) Stop projecting your ignorance on other people. Please keep your negative attitude to yourself.
@@chrispnw2547 Not going to.
@@waldemarsikorski4759 Listen to what? Rich people being ignorant?
It’s insane if you own land you can be forced to hook up to cooperate or government electric companies. How someone gets power as long as it doesn’t damage the environment more than the current system should be none of governments business.
Most laws are made to move money from normal humans to corporate bank accounts.
I agree with you, modern solar energy systems are pretty much turnkey systems that just need installing. Although, the grid would provide a nice "backup" in case the solar energy system fails for any reason. I believe that energy sources should be diversified so the fridge does not lose power. But just because you have to have it - you don't have to use it.
No you are wrong! Only if you have a SITUS, with the government. Otherwise you are private. Check it out, SITUS.
@@thewiseturtle Banks really don't do anything.. They are established to interfere,and get in everyones' business.. My horrible pun...intended.!!?
@@thewiseturtle The government is a corporation owned by the big banks
I wouldn’t want to live in it, but damn what an interesting visit. Thanks for covering such a broad spectrum of homes on this channel!
yes the interior has a very ''cold' feel to it, like an elongated aircraft hangar. Colours are industrial. Not homely at all.
County A-Holes prevent a smaller RV from passing. Forcing a spaceship like cubic modern
structure in a pristine environment. Less size was more. County A-Holes are idiots.
By the looks of the refrigerator they don’t live there year round.
Not a "family" house, that is for sure. That is what a successful single / unmarried business man builds. There are no signs of woman living in this house.
@@elmono3939 you didn’t notice the two gay guys… I mean you have to be pretty brain dead if not
That’s not a skyscraper it’s a groundscraper 😝
Well technically, on those pillars, 4 of them maybe.
Yeah, but it’s like floating above the floor, just like the owners…
It's a glass/mirror sided trailer dropped onto 80 acres.
The guitar is epic.
The house is an acoustic nightmare.
Yeah, the doors he decided against would help a lot, and some smarter design of the corners
As a city planner, I am appalled that this guy couldn't live in a tiny home in this barren area and had to build this huge structure instead bc the officials told him he couldn't live in a tiny.
Exquisite. Yes, they have money, but don't let that keep you from seeing this truth: this couple gets it. Mother nature is the headliner. My favorite moment? Him showing the bloom of wildflowers after the rains. Thank you, Kirsten (and family), for your amazing tours and access. Always inspirational, often spiritual. ❤
If they had the exterior glass leaning forward about 10 degrees from the top, it would always only reflect the ground terrain around it and would be invisible. An interesting design for sure. Wonder what will be left in 20 years, one mans dream is not another mans desire.
Look at the rocks weathered by wind blown sand and tell me the mirors will last. Not a chance.
@@donaldcarey114 - Interesting point!
@@donaldcarey114 not with an engineered glass.. probably just tiny scratch mark like a key scratch a glass phone
@@spotty001dv6 If wind blown sand can create rock formations it can frost "engineered" glass, believe me. There are places where folks have to replace their automobile windshields on a regular basis, look it up.
p.s. Have you ever gone out in a sand/dust storm?
@@donaldcarey114 yes, i got your point. I was just thinking, if Burj Khalifa building in Dubai can survive sand storm on a regular basis, this invisible house is supposed to be fine too.. 😉
Ky heart goes out to natives of California who are being priced out of their home, people who have lived there for decades and decades.
Agree
Leaving to West Virginia after living here for my forty years of life.. but the real tragedy is all people who are being pushed out right onto the streets. Many would want everyone to believe that the homeless are all on drugs or mentally ill.. but so many are just hard working people who can’t afford shelter. It’s been devastating to see.
Its happening all over the country. The goal is for no private ownership.
@@HerMajesty1 yep
They voted for it and they will vote again for their own demise.
I once knew an Australian Army Camouflage Specialist who Retired and moved to the West of Ireland, where with a Cliff Face backdrop he constructed a Modern Two Story Detached House, which is absolutely invisible from virtually every viewing angle.
At night he can betray the House by indiscreetly illuminating the interior with uncovered Windows.
Did you see it? How awesome!
@@starlightmckennah5241 I did see some photographs of it once and yes you really had to look hard (and in the right place) to see it.
More a Work of Art than a Camouflaged structure.
Even the Driveway to the House didn’t prepare you for its actual location in the landscape.
cool story bro
The govt kept me from finishing my home on my property. I just didnt have enough money to fight them. Its horrible how they regulate just for their greedy ways
That's horrible. We fought more than we gain. Worst time in our lives.
Its so hard for the little person to fight. We all know the govt wants to keep us under their thumb. If you keep a nation sick and on altered lifestyles them they have control
10 years later hopefully its not abandoned. What an investment it feels like its just for a show.
A pitch perfect parody of eccentric old cali millionaires. Classic. This guy is a sketch and a half.
Pretty sure more than one magic mushroom has taken up residence in that home. /s
Really, “a pitch perfect parody” Eli? That’s your sarcastic, ill informed take? These are just Creatives who made their livings as Union Film Crew who worked their asses off for three decades… I would know.
@@UA-cam_can_ESAD If you don't think this whole situation is funny I don't know what to tell you. It's funny. Objectively. You should should know this.
@@Eliguitar1
Old fart, I'd say. I'm one, so I think I recognise the tonal breadth. But, what's in a name?
BTW, nice Gypsy guitar, pardon my improper noun (again, old fart).
I'm always somewhat perplexed at the restrictions and requirements placed on building on your own land when you look around and see what people live in. Many people live in houses that wouldn't be allowed to be built. Or they live in squalor and the bureaucracy are telling this guy his house has to be 20 feet wide. At it's most extreme this guy is being told what he can and can't build on his own property but in some parts of the country you can set up a tent on land that isn't yours and urinate and defecate on the streets along with hundreds of other people. I get the reason for codes and such but how can these two worlds exist at the same time...
Because people who live in tents have no money, so they leave them alone, while a property owner they can extract revenue from. that's why.
@@eddieco probably
aka: Screwing the middle class.
@@markrouse2416 Exactly. But not just the middle class. They're screwing anyone who owns property. Look up Los Angeles County NAT teams... LAC literally sent out "enforcers" along with heavilly armed sheriff's deputies to remote areas of LAC where land owners had built small homes to live in. No neighbors, no one being bothered, but because they didn't get permits... (aka give the county their cut), these guys showed up, demolished homes, and left people, even families, homeless.
Many of the people they did this to were lower income, and often times, folks who didn't speak english. So they're screwing everyone.
@@eddieco Exactly. Best not to have a check book and be a liability to the city, county, state. No debtor’s prison. My goal is to be an empty bag and not have to follow ridiculous rules. I will cost them money if they lock me up etc.
Feels like an opportunity was missed to make the cantilever a carport, so you could park the cars under the house to keep them out of the sun.
Smart thinking
Yeah, my first thought, a garage actually is a necessity in the desert, with all the sand and temperatures. It should be inside so the car doesn’t wear out too quickly. Hiding a car is the most eco friendly thing to do.
@@Brian-jv8iy especially if it's electric, heat is the enemy of lithium batteries
I wondered this same thing about a carport. Also would have loved a discussion on where the water is coming from. Can't help noticing the pronounced similarities to the Miesian Dr Edith Farnsworth House. Truly a contemporary take on the same theme. Would have also liked to see the original structure. While the main home is interesting and architecturally stunning, absolutely zero intelligence was utilized in requiring the larger home to be built yet allowing the original to remain as an out building. The incredibly pompous ignorance and elitist nature of demanding a more massive structure in this environment is so hideously wasteful and irresponsible of the governing body.......typical California.
That's not something you see everyday.
Amazing.
Thanks Kirsten, that was really interesting, and right up my alley. I have lived the Desert since 1961, and I have lived in Phoenix for 26 years. Bye the way, I love your work, being digital media person myself for 39 years this month. I smile whenever I watch your videos.
That is so interesting , you always find special houses . I've been watching your videos for years now , fascinating .
Growing up in California I visited Joshua Tree many times and it was tough because in those days very few cars were air conditioned. I could never imagine living there. This is an intriguing house and so well camouflaged. I can understand why this respite is so needed by the owner to get far away from the masses. I left California for that reason in 1986. Joshua Tree never held my imagination. It was too bleak and unforgiving. It takes a special person to be drawn to it.
T
I love Joshua tree ...spent many a year there...it is alive and vibrant vibrant...At... Night! so much wildlife..and creatures...
@@martenkrueger8647 lol. I was just thinking the opposite. I grew up in the desolate desert. Hot as hades in the day and winter coats at night, always afraid to walk in it due to rattle snakes. Then my folks took us to visit relatives in Utah up north. I woke up to green leaves on trees and roses and trees bearing fruit . The streets were clean and sidewalks were great. Lots of sprinklers on every lawn. The weather perfect. I thought I was in heaven and I vowed when I could I would live in green, vibrant serene valley with pigmy goats. Visited Phoenix once when they were having 116°f. The pavement was so hot you got tar on the bottom of your shoes. .We took a drive out to my old stomping grounds. It looked like a place on the moon. So baron and lifeless except for the hot dry air constantly blowing. Made me shudder.
One of my favorite places
What they didn’t tell you is how many birds die every year banging into this thing because they don’t know it’s glass happens all the time in the desert with your windows If it has a reflective glass on it which this does
Anyone else living, or visiting, in the area had to be careful of which direction they face, at certain times of the day... lest they be blinded by the sun's reflection?
Having grown up in a big city, I'm obviously not a fan of mirrored buildings.
They also kill birds. Windows are bad enough for them, but mirrored building are terrible.
Cool project, yet wondering how many birds have kamikazed that glass/mirror.
Maybe not being able to see through reduces those events
Ouch
@@7schlafer886 it increases them. They think they can fly thru
Didn't watch the whole video huh?
They address that and say most birds in that area walk around instead of flying and that they don't have issues with birds hitting the glass. :{
That was my first thought having put dots on my large windows to stop bird strikes. But as this is UV reflective glass the birds may see it as a solid box.
Not for me , odd people with lots of money.
I have heard that there are places that will not allow a home owner to go off grid and go completely to solar. This is such a scam. Selling your electricity to the electric company is another scam. The amount they will give per kwh is lower than what a customer has to pay.
Everything about this is amazing - except for the glass / lexan bedframe that I would lose toes to and tear my shins up on.
To pull a permit and get solar in the "free State of Florida" one must also connect to Florida Power & Light's (FPL's) grid, or you can't go solar. As for water, 13 States have restrictions on the collection of rain water, 17 States where it's "legal" (thank you massa) and 20 States where it is encouraged - CA isn't one of them ("Meet the Resnick's" and thank them). Those folks in the Italian Alps don't know how good they got it.
Very interesting aspect of homebuying/building I wasn’t aware of.
@@alison5009 If you've never heard of "The Garbage Warrior" (name of documentary - highly recommended) Michael Reynolds, he's the architect behind Earthships (based in Taos, NM) and back in 2007 he had a map on his website titled "Pockets of Freedom" - places where you could built without bureaucratic / corporate restrictions. Well that map is gone! Still, look him and his work up - you'll love it. Kirsten has featured a vid of Earthships here on her site too. Anyway, have a beautiful and safe weekend (we're in the peak end of Mercury retrograde so probably NOT a good time to be on the road).
"Laaand of the fee, and the home of the slave"
meanwhile fpl pollutes the drinking water at turkey point 🤐
and makes customer pay for that also, plus they got a new reactor and forced customers to also fund that prebuild.
Incredible monopoly they run.
How many birds have been disabled or killed flying into those mirrored windows??!!
did you watch the video hippie?
@@DanielRichards644 we answered that already dork
Maybe Nasty Pelosi's face hit it?
Love this. I love the modern open interior with the polished concrete floors.
The elephant in the room is all that glass needing to be regularly cleaned…
Exactly what i was thinking !
Right?!? 🤣
@Hira Matangi - yes, was also one of my initial thoughts too. Coming from Minnesota, a state w well over 10,000 lakes, I'm unfamiliar w desert environment. But without moisture in the air, doesn't the windblasted sand just fall off? No moisture to "stick?" In my imagination, unencombered by facts, the glass would become dusty. And perhaps only until the next strong blast of wind removes it?
I'd guess the issue would be the long-term accumulative effect of glass routinely pelted with sand. Haze via etching? Which, of course, no amount of window washing will remove.
Thoughts?
@@bethanyanderson1745 most glass can’t be scratched by any kind of sand, even with desert storms.
@@bethanyanderson1745 There's rarely wind blown sand in undisturbed desert environment where that house is. Undisturbed desert soils have the tinier particles sifted deeper in the soil crust so larger sand particles and pebbles stay top. Then there's all the plant life that stabilizes the soil.
I watch all your videos but have rarely commented. I enjoyed this video quite a bit. Interesting homeowners, interesting home, beautiful landscape.
Thanks for another amazing tale.
Wow! I'm in awe of this home. Its unconventional design and the way it's integrated into the landscape are totally stunning. Thanks for this video.
I’m wondering who takes advantage of the new shady niche beneath?
Hopefully a green mojave.
Wow, Kirsten.
This must have been amazing to experience.
I love eccentric people.
This producer definitely knows how to produce.
Next time I'm in S. Cali I'm going to see if it's possible to go see this amazing home.
I'd imagine he allows curious people to visit (exterior) from time to time.
Thanks for another great tour.
Thanks for sharing…. Lovely project
"Well, we wanted to live in a small place, but the county wouldn't allow it; so we spent millions on this cool place entirely walled with insulated mirror glass and with an indoor pool."
It must be nice.
This looks like a disaster for birds. Buildings like this are bird serial killers.
Awful.
Did you even watch the video, they addressed this very issue hippie.
@@DanielRichards644 they lied doofus
At 17:25, Chris says, "California lost 4 million acres of land last year." What is he referring to? Is he talking about ocean erosion and that the land was lost to the ocean? Or is he referring to the fire that ravaged through California?
Yeah, I too was suddenly distracted by that comment. "Lost"? Land? Did the aliens abduct it? But, yeah, I presume he meant that the flora (and much of the fauna too) burned on that land.
It also has the perfect anti-burgular system. Anybody coming too close gets fried by the reflecting sun-beams...
Well, from the outside it seems to be an interesting idea, but inside is just absurd. A pool. Glass bed. Everything pricy and fancy, but so dull and colourless. And no plants?
He'd have to water plants
I wonder if they allow animals to live under the house? Any critter would naturally seek out protection from the sun. Scorpions, snakes, gila monsters, lizards, spiders, etc. Not putting a creepy spin on it, but what else lives there? Not fluffy bunnies or peacocks.
Doubt if they get much choice. If there's rattlesnakes out there they will go under there. You just need to watch were you step.
@@irisjanemay1903 There are steps you can take to eliminate and prevent (lights, sprays, etc.), but I'll bet the codes in that area control the sewage and ground water and watch over the crawly things.
@@bentnickel7487 Ah the joy of having to repel, kill and dissuade nature in order to pretend you love nature and want to live in it. Our neighbours say they love nature but they have lawns that look like carpets and constantly spray pesticides and keep critters away. Our garden is a mess, but we get all the birds, hedgehogs, bees, butterflies etc that nature needs to sustain itself.
How many flying birds do you think this building has killed or injured?
@@bentnickel7487 Nope. The local Home Depot sells every kind of poison you could wish for, much to detriment of the wildlife and pets who ingest it by accident. No sewer either, all homes and businesses in Joshua Tree have a septic tank. I don't know where you live, but not many places let you dump raw sewage on the ground.
Gorgeous conception. A little too modern for my tastes, but luxurious and so damn efficient I could not stop watching.
The biggest surprise is how empty the refrigerator was!
Thats because they don't really live there. They visit their estate now and then. And in between rent it out on air bnb for $3000 a night.
@@bregtolla I thought it was more of an ad than a tour, that makes more sense. Thanks.
I love this house, I'm so glad you made the video for everyone to see. Thank you. XO Natalie
I know someone who lives near there and they say birds fly right into it. I think it looks out of place.
Cool answer about birds all being roadrunner type birds. But birds do fly in the desert, so not 100% true. But people believe what the is convenient to their narrative
@@kenyonbissett3512 Roadrunners fly, Quail fly all the birds fly. The dumbest ones are Pigeons and the Mexican Doves - they seek glass windows.
@@idavidgraficks123 I know all there is to know about roadrunners. Roadrunners run and Wiley Coyote chases. I watched it on Saturday morning cartoons for years and years and years. Oh and they say Beep beep as they peck at corn.
I read a book about roadrunners and they said they can glide but not really fly. And they eat snakes. But since that was never on the cartoon, I’m not sure if it’s really true.
@@kenyonbissett3512 Roadrunners can fly. They don't make a habit of it but they can ascend in flight. I've been in Joshua Tree 37 years and have had thousands of interactions with Roadrunners. I have a water source for wildlife (including Roadrunners) less than fifteen feet from this computer I'm on. Oh, and it's Meep Meep.
Cool concept. Love how this channel showcases different homes/buildings and the narrative that led to them being built.
I would assume birds are flying into the side of this building and dying for this. Shameful.
@Marilyn Alspachtoth - this was covered in the video.
@@bethanyanderson1745 she didn't watch it.
Your assumption is correct, regardless of what they said in the video.
What an amazing home! The desert landscape is breathtaking..
thank you for the tour of this amazing home
The US use to have a listening station on a mountain beside the Hanford reservation where they made plutonium. It was made out of mirrored windows on buildings overlooking the workers. This building reminds me of it.
@Whiskeystraw I had never heard of the Hanford nuclear reservation. Thank you for opening my eyes to this situation. Do you know of anything like that in California?
Really cool. They don't have much in the fridge, I guess they're not living there, but just visit(?)
not sure what it was like at the time they filmed but the house is currently listed on AirBNB right now at a little over 3 grand a night.
New sub. This video, and the life in the 17th century vid, were two of the most informative and interesting videos I have watched lately.
Very very cool.
I could've listened to Chris talk for an hour. Amazing home!
Really neat house. Weird dude, really weird
Lap pool...beer and blueberries...yea I could live there!! 😎 With snow how fabulous!! They're all doors..😁💫
That has to be one of the most beautiful homes I've ever seen... So incredibly magnificent... Desert Majesty...
Once you live in/on the desert you appreciate its beauty. Seasons on the desert is like nothing else. Would love to see the white container build.
Did not see any water conservation or desert rejuvenation construct... 👍❗
I can only imagine how much all this cost.
several hundred thousand, in glass alone, several hundred thousand more in steel work, I would guess around 2 million in total once kitted out with the solar, not more then 3 million unless they just got screwed by the contractor and architect.
@@DanielRichards644 that counts me out
@@kenyonbissett3512 you could do what they do and rent the place out for 3 grand a night on AirBnB, even only renting 100 nights a year, that's 300k a year, 10 years of that and the place is paid for.
@@DanielRichards644 How much to clean the glass?
Even if it's not for me to want to live in, I do find it fascinating. I appreciate that you are showing us places some of us never imagined exist or would see. TY
This will be another shell of a building left in the desert 10 years from now
@KirstenDirksen your videos are so detailed, love it! Keep up the great work
A swimming pool? In this desert? What kind of water-fat museum Fremen are these?
It's inside...
This was a pleasure to watch. Hope we get to see the shipping container one next.
Stunning design! There are those who can appreciate the desert. Thank you for being one of them. It's not for everyone. If you ever get the chance, read the book "Desert Solitaire ". Great video presentation as well. I love it!
Wow. True artistry. Living, breathing, continuously morphing with the landscape, art.
Nice to see such depth of concept with relation to materials and setting. Definitely a work of art. Thanks Kirsten!
Incredible, they are embracing the best qualities of Joshua Tree
Thank you for sharing
This is really different to look at it looks like it’s part of the valley all those mirrors reflecting back what you’re saying thank you so much for sharing such an unusual structure. I love the architecture
I’d love to know:
1. Why won’t the regulators allow off-grid electricity? Is it mostly to make sure “transient people” (i.e. people living out of rv’s) can’t live there???
2. Due to seismic activity, won’t the house eventually twist and cause the foundation to crack and the windows to no longer fit their frames? Or, has architecture and modern technology fixed that problem???
3. How do they keep things from melting. Like insulation (is that the right term?) around the doors to their home and to their car? This is a problem for those of us closer to the shore.
4. Is it hard to get cell-phone/ wifi reception out there? What about food and other deliveries?
The answers to all your questions are probably some variation of "all problems are solvable with enough money".
@@NerdierthanU "The root of all evil, is the love of money"
Bottom line the Government DOES NOT want you to be independent. Can't control you that way.
The less dependent you are on the regulators, the less they can control you.
@@cletushatfield8817 Regulators=good, Corrupted Regulators=bad
Great building but forgive me but did I hear they have a dryer ( for cloths)... in the desert? Am I missing something? Other than that mundane observation, it is fabulous X
No, they probably do have a dryer, just like people need a dishwasher. Can't do stuff by hand now, can you...
you want them littering the scenery with their clothes hanging on a clothes line? What about DIRT, wind kicks up some dust and your "clean" clothes are now dirty again. Also SOLAR SOLAR SOLAR, so they are simply using the electricity provided by the sun, just in a less efficient means.
@@dingo1666 Dishwashers are more efficient (in terms of water usage) then washing everything by hand
@@DanielRichards644 You have a good point.
It’s sort of difficult to make a clothes line blend into the environment that they’ve chosen.
what an awesome building. really cool concept and interesting guy!
Gorgeous! They did such a great job. They get to see nature 24-7 and live in a cool freaking house.
Joshua Tree and the surrounding area is home to many different indigenous tribes including the Serrano, Chemehuevi, Mojave Cahuilla, and Mojave.
"Southern Paiute called the Joshua tree sovarampi. Cahuilla Indians referred to it as humwichawa and the Western Shoshone knew it simply as umpu. For thousands of years many Indian groups embraced the tree as a spiritual reference and valued resource."
Let us reference and celebrate the broader history of the lands, the places we occupy, not just the colonial periods.
I don't know how you has been edumacated, but that is NOT invisible! 😱😁🤪🤣👍✌
blends in way more then a typical house, until we have building scale optical camouflage this is about as close to invisible as you can get without burying a house, which might cool, just a wall of that glass inset into the side of the hill would disappear even better.
Absolutely Fantastic video Kirsten. My favorite of all. My favorite house in the world. The owner is ultra.
Sooooo many cool ideas in this design!
I like - love this house. But it's quite the departure from this channel. An Uber expensive house that doesn't even look like they live there.
I don’t think they have spent the night there.
Tell them they measured that manufactured home wrong its actually 40 feet Wide and 14 feet deep!
I love this house and the way you have considered the environment surrounding it. Would live there in a heartbeat.
Chris congratulations! Magnificent house!
🤯 Fantastica! Beautiful building and global landscape. It almost seems easy to live there.
It is a stark beauty, but I'm sure the average person could not afford the cost of getting/keeping water on the property.
Sometimes it is best to let the house speak for itself.
😂
It has
"They insisted that in not be less then 20 feet wide..."
Strange than anyone could give a flip when you consider the area that it is in.
It’s amazing! I love it 🔥👍🏽❤️
These guys don’t waste any opportunity to make a scene. Even going as far as one dressing in white, and the other one dressing all in black.
What happens if those boulders roll down the hill?? This doesn't look practically placed to me... Looks like they were blinded by making it pretty w/o thinking about nature's wrath...
There’s a lot of distance between the bottom of the house and the ground. It’d take all the boulders to fall to do some damage I’m guessing
Home owners insurance
This is so beautifully amazing.
You good you're absolutely awesome old souls walking the trail..
Interesting, but "no". We weren't meant to live in such a place. There is zero water where that structure exists.
A beautiful adobe home, or even a riff on an Anasazi building, would have been so much more interesting, beautiful, and inspiring. This is a monument to cultural sterility dropped into the desert.
Nothing Wong with wanting to blend in.
It's beautiful like the desert, but in a different way that compliments, and shows the beautiful landscape off.
@Robert Seaton - variety baby, variety.
@@kenyonbissett3512 It only blends in if you look at it from certain angles, otherwise it looks like a giant trailer (0:49) (1:21), and I wonder if it lights up like an office building at night.
You might like the Doolittle House in Joshua Tree. Absolutely complete opposite of this house.
Oh well, rich people. They have the money to pull the right strings. Regular earthling could never build such a house in JT because of the bureaucracy surrounding such project. Have money, live by your dreams. What else is new ? Thank you for sharing. It is a beautiful piece of modern architecture !
Incredible!
Seems like a Bond's "bag guy's" house. Proved by the washer dryer. Why a dryer :D
Because they have SOLAR FREAKING POWER IN A FUCKING DESERT and don't want their clothes getting dirty from a gust of wind blowing dust around??????
Clothes can dry inside, duh
@@DanielRichards644 I thought the smily face clarified that this was a joke.
@@rafaeldegiacomoaraujo8778 when you are the 25th comment about the dryer your comment is not read in full
@@DanielRichards644 👍
Genius solution to siting and disappearing into the landscape. Ultimate Feng Shui. This channel consistently delivers interesting, fun and eco friendly design content. Kudos to you and keep up the good work.
I love the music from The Ramones, Blondie and Afrika Bambaataa. Honestly though I had no idea who this guy was even after he started talking a little bit about his career. Thanks for putting it in the description. Cool place he lives in.
Incredible!!
That is hideous.
how many birds have smashed themselves on this huge mirror?
18:25
@@nicolasboullosa Is that the part where they say birds don't fly?
@@pepperpepperpepper Have you seen any roadrunner or rooster flying by your window lately? Sure you have.
Super cool ! 👏👏
Amazing house and an amazing couple - Chris is so full of character.