R
Jan 16–Feb 27, 1994

Turn of the Century Home

Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

Booth/Hansen & Associates, The House That Can Take It, Lakeside, Michigan, 1994.

  • Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

    Booth/Hansen & Associates, The House That Can Take It, Lakeside, Michigan, 1994.

  • Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

    Turn of the Century Home, Installation View, 1994.

  • Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

    Turn of the Century Home, Installation View, 1994.

  • Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

    Booth/Hansen & Associates, The House That Can Take It, Lakeside, Michigan, 1994.

  • Model of an almost airplane-shaped house with a rectangular extension on one side, with a ring of lawn around it.

    Douglas Farr and Gwendolyn Conners, Ruff Residence, Berkshire Hills, Massachusetts, 1990.

  • This exhibition will focus on the resurgence of innovative single family home design by 48 Chicago area architects. Drawings, plans, and models for both real and imagined projects will make up the exhibition. As a whole, the exhibition will not only address architecture, but how changing lifestyles and definitions of “family” and “home” are influencing contemporary design. The exhibition will feature over 100 drawings, floor plans, and models for 72 distinct residences. Roughly half of the designs have been built in the past 5 years, and half are in the process of being built.

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