Booth House | |
Building Type: | House |
Architectural Style: | Modernist |
Location: | Bedford, New York |
Coordinates: | 41.2009°N -73.6168°W |
Start Date: | 1946 |
Floor Area: | 1440square feet |
Architect: | Philip Johnson |
The Booth House is a single-story modernist house in Bedford, New York. Built in 1946, the house was American architect Philip Johnson's first residential commission,[1] and is a stylistic precursor to Johnson's better-known 1949 Glass House in New Canaan, Connecticut.[2]
The house's concrete block and plate glass exterior is supported by steel beams and columns, and its interior features a large masonry fireplace.[3] Its design was influenced by Johnson's mentors. Landis Gores described the house as a "cross-breed in concrete block between [Johnson's] Lincoln project for [Professor] Bogner and [Le Corbusier's] De Mandrot house from which it had taken its origin: a raised podium."[4]
Johnson designed the house for Richard and Olga Booth, a young couple who wanted a weekend house near Manhattan.[5] Architectural photographer Robert Damora and architect Sirkka Damora purchased the house in 1955 for $23,500 and lived there for 55 years. In 2010, the widowed Sirkka Damora put the 1440square feet house, an 800square feet studio building, and their 1.92acres lot up for sale, with an asking price of $2 million.[6]