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The Glass House Jun 2026

feet, with floor-to-ceiling glass walls supported by black steel pillars.

At first glance, the structure appears deceptively simple. It is a rectangular box measuring 56 feet long, 32 feet wide, and 10.5 feet high. The framework is composed of dark gray steel pillars and stock-sized glass panes, creating a seamless transparent skin. The Glass House

Philip Johnson designed the Glass House as his own private residence, drawing inspiration from Mies van der Rohe’s then-unbuilt Farnsworth House. The house is a rectangular prism measuring 55 feet by 33 feet, featuring floor-to-ceiling glass walls supported by a black-painted steel frame. The Glass House feet, with floor-to-ceiling glass walls supported by black

To understand The Glass House, one must understand the architectural climate of the mid-20th century. Philip Johnson, along with architectural historian Henry-Russell Hitchcock, had previously codified the "International Style" in their seminal 1932 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). This style emphasized volume over mass, regularity over symmetry, and the complete avoidance of applied decoration. The framework is composed of dark gray steel

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