This was a house that was meant to be built. The stars aligned in so many ways. The Stahls dreamed about buying that lot, though they didn't think they could afford it. One day they decided to drive up to it on a whim. The owner happened to show up and sold them the property, carrying back the note. They had trouble hiring an architect. They wound up with the best one possible, Peter Koenig. Then they had trouble getting financing. Finally a Black owned finance company was willing to underwrite a loan, provided they also build a pool, to increase the value of the home. Could you imagine this house without a pool? And then there was Julius Schulman and his photograph. Magical in every way!
One sad thing... the overlook of Sunset gives you a view of CVS, but in the 1950s it would have been Googie's first coffee shop, a Lautner masterpiece nestled in tight next to Schwab's.. It was Googie's that kick started the modernist 'mid-century' commercial architecture movement in Los Angeles.
Thanks Alison, I got to relive the tour that my wife and I had in 2011! The model of the Stahl house that I am make will hopefully make someone happy !!
This Case Study House #22 will never go out of style. His parents (Buck and Carlotta) worked thier butts off to build this place. Buck created a model of this site, and Koenig used that as the base of the design and provided the calculations to support the building. Masterpiece of Buck and Carlotta Stahl.
Not possible without Paul r Williams, the most famous black architect in history. But these silly story's leave this fact out, I won't. Without Paul r Williams, there would be no stahl house-period.
Across the basin sitting on a ridge of Palos Verdes are homes that have views of the coastline towards Malibu & to the right towards the Hollywood Hills, downtown LA, etc. It's like being in a helicopter. Being able to wake up everyday to that sight would be a major distraction. Same with the Stahl House. Cleaner air in today's LA makes such things better now than in the past. In turn, a lot of the flat lands in the LA basin (as seen from hillside homes) were carved out over 70 years ago & could use the same thing: Major cleaning or so-called beautifying.
Nice house, although I don’t know I’d want walls of glass, as there isn’t much privacy. Not to mention all the sun coming in and fading everything, including those beautiful Eames pieces.
This was a house that was meant to be built. The stars aligned in so many ways. The Stahls dreamed about buying that lot, though they didn't think they could afford it. One day they decided to drive up to it on a whim. The owner happened to show up and sold them the property, carrying back the note. They had trouble hiring an architect. They wound up with the best one possible, Peter Koenig. Then they had trouble getting financing. Finally a Black owned finance company was willing to underwrite a loan, provided they also build a pool, to increase the value of the home.
Could you imagine this house without a pool? And then there was Julius Schulman and his photograph. Magical in every way!
Nol Cal, I've seen this so many never thought much till I ran across an article on your dad. Thank you for this great piece.
One sad thing... the overlook of Sunset gives you a view of CVS, but in the 1950s it would have been Googie's first coffee shop, a Lautner masterpiece nestled in tight next to Schwab's.. It was Googie's that kick started the modernist 'mid-century' commercial architecture movement in Los Angeles.
Thanks Alison, I got to relive the tour that my wife and I had in 2011! The model of the Stahl house that I am make will hopefully make someone happy !!
This Case Study House #22 will never go out of style. His parents (Buck and Carlotta) worked thier butts off to build this place. Buck created a model of this site, and Koenig used that as the base of the design and provided the calculations to support the building. Masterpiece of Buck and Carlotta Stahl.
LOVE this house!
As the PROUD "owner" of a '71 Schult "Homested" mobile home, in Duluth, Minnesota; YOUR DAD "MADE MUSICAL WONDER"! YOU MAKE "Not SO much"!
It does look amazing
ahhhhhh my dream house!
Was this the "Prescription Murder" (Peter Falk 1968) movie house?
Beatiful house
How could you own it and not live in it 😭
I don't understand that either 😬
He did live in it for his entire childhood. Now he's preserving it and sharing it with others. I think that's inspiring.
Not possible without Paul r Williams, the most famous black architect in history. But these silly story's leave this fact out, I won't. Without Paul r Williams, there would be no stahl house-period.
@@marcusbrown1767 Not sure I understand. What was Pierre Koenig's professional relationship with Paul Williams?
@@marcusbrown1767why do you leave that exact comment on every video about this house?
Across the basin sitting on a ridge of Palos Verdes are homes that have views of the coastline towards Malibu & to the right towards the Hollywood Hills, downtown LA, etc. It's like being in a helicopter. Being able to wake up everyday to that sight would be a major distraction. Same with the Stahl House. Cleaner air in today's LA makes such things better now than in the past. In turn, a lot of the flat lands in the LA basin (as seen from hillside homes) were carved out over 70 years ago & could use the same thing: Major cleaning or so-called beautifying.
They must have been so rich. What did his dad do for a living?
When I think of LA I think of this house and vice versa.
Wasn’t this the house where Leo DiCaprio was having a Boogaloo 1960’s party in the movie “Catch Me If You Can”??
Not the same house
Nice house, although I don’t know I’d want walls of glass, as there isn’t much privacy. Not to mention all the sun coming in and fading everything, including those beautiful Eames pieces.
Hey Alison your brown roots are showing
Ahhh yes.. Martino. Nepotism at its finest. She's never done a thing for herself, just rides her daddy's old coattails. What a bore.
There's always a hater. Go sit down.
@@paulrowan99 Just like there are truth deniers. You go sit down Alison.
Love this.