Richard meier dallas




















Grass, trees, pond and sky are visible from every angle of the house. The heart of the house is the second floor living room. Secrets of the entire site are revealed through the double-height plane of windows that serve as a permeable membrane between nature and home.

Ultimately, the purpose of The Rachofsky House is to provide a place of residence and respite. The potential of the house as a work of architecture is as a catalyst for further contemplation of nature and art, and the science of bringing them together in harmony. It has the aerodynamics, engineering, grace and power to go miles an hour, but one you would only take out a couple of times a month.

This home, which serves as an architectural laboratory, lets the architect push his aesthetic, challenges contractors and vendors to new limits, and most of all, inspires others to imagine space, structure and light in a new way. Read a blog article about Richard Meier and the Rachofsky House. Architecturally Significant Homes. Dallas Neighborhoods. Preston Hollow. Old Preston Hollow.

Preston Hollow Addition. Architect Richard Meier. Landcape Architect Armstrong-Berger. Preston Hollow Neighborhood. Preston Hollow Addition Neighborhood. Contemporary Style Architecture. Dallas Modern Homes. Howard Rachofsky commissioned Richard Meier in the mid s to design a home with a short term, intermediate and long term program in mind.

Then the home would transition to a private gallery of art and made very accessible to the public. Eventually the home would be become part of the Dallas Museum of Art , which the Rachofskys have already directed along with their art to the DMA.

The biggest difference in viewing art in a home versus a building designed as a public space is the enhanced feeling of intimacy. Residents or guests have an immediate relationship with the art as it is connected with a person and a place. One feels a greater sense of ownership of the art as a guest than as a visitor to a museum. Paintings, sculpture or other media installations become seared in the mind, and are revisited like an old friend.

When art is experienced in this Richard Meier designed home, this sense of familiarity and connection is expedited and expanded. Some assert that modern homes are sterile like museums. The best museums engage all the senses, emotions and the intellect. This is where a residence as a gallery has an advantage. Richard Meier has designed fabulous museums like the High Museum of Art that, to a casual observer, might look like larger versions of the Richard Meier designed modern home.

But they are not the same. The design of this contemporary home is modern but the scale and approach is classic and timeless. As with any proper estate home, this one sits on a large lot — three acres — which provides a long approach past a vast perfect, manicured plane of grass. On one side of the home a grid of glazed panels comprise cantilevered walls of glass looking out to a small lake. In the rear of the house a large reflecting pool captures the reflection of this elegant residence, a rear garden adds to the tranquility.

Hidden in the dense growth is art that amuses and provokes.



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