I love the Bradyness of this place. It totally makes me want to nail my co-star and then write a book about it 30 years later. But seriously, this is awesome. It's like Ikea threw up something it ate in a previous life.
its so pristine that it looks almost fake...like some sims house 3D program of the future..a virtual home...only using real old 70's decor
November 13, 2008 at 7:20 PM
Anonymous said...
Someone needs to tell James Lileks at lileks.com about this. He's fanatical about classic 50s-60s decor - he'd have conniptions over this immaculate, perfectly preserved time capsule of awesomeness.
Wow, even the TV set is seriously retro. It's like the house that time forgot.
November 14, 2008 at 2:02 AM
Anonymous said...
The Brady's have already been mentioned - whew!
I just want to WALK all around that place. All those turns and corners? Wow!
November 14, 2008 at 2:29 AM
Anonymous said...
If that furniture is real, I'll eat the 70s-pattern chaise lounge. That has all the looks of a photoshop disaster to me! I think it's that something seems off about the colors and the way the furniture doesn't quite blend around the edges and doesn't cast shadows in the right spots. And NOBODY has that many stamplike patterns on their walls!
I am so envious. Your new office space is extremely cool.
Or is it hep?
Swell?
November 14, 2008 at 6:59 AM
Anonymous said...
Is that a typewriter I see on the desk in the office? That's awesome. Interesting to note in the sales pitch they say "First time home is on the market since it was built." Really? With such modern conveniences as a typewriter and a color tv, I would have never guessed!
I agree with the commenters who suspect this is faked using photoshop or Sims or something. All those patterns, too-bright colors, the couch looks stretched, weight lighting...yeah. Unreal.
Also, the end of the post about hanging up those pictures TOTALLY cracked me up!
November 14, 2008 at 8:08 AM
Anonymous said...
I love that house! I don't understand where all their stuff is, but I love that house.
But how on earth did you escape putting the bar picture on the blog?
November 14, 2008 at 8:13 AM
Anonymous said...
I WANT THIS HOUSE. today, now, really and I love New Zealand, it is perfect, I have already written to an Aussie friend and told her we should buy it and move there..of course she will say no, but I am trying anyway
Oh sweet jesus! I'll offer the sellers one million dollars right now to pack only their clothes and move out. Wait...I'll bet their clothes are awesome too. One mill to just leave.
This seriously makes me want to put on a girdle and apron, put an Esquivel record on, and serve my man (wearing a suit, of course) a martini! Gotta go fix my bouffant!
A rumpus room?? A rumpus room!! I'm also loving the thought of having a conversation while sitting in the arm chairs in the formal living room: Me: WHAT? I CAN'T HEAR YOU! Guest: HUH? WHY ARE WE SITTING TWO MILES FROM EACH OTHER?
And what's with all those weird angles? Something is definitely, ah...askew.
November 14, 2008 at 11:26 AM
Anonymous said...
Fabulous! - Mid-C Frank
November 14, 2008 at 11:54 AM
Anonymous said...
Best. House. Evar. First, I couldn't get over the padded bar. Then I started drooling over the kitchen. When I got to the office, I nearly fainted--is that a DICTAPHONE on that desk? I think it is! Some questionable furniture and light fixtures but overall, I'd buy it in a second if I had the money.
Ah yes, the weird angles, that's the standard wide angle shot that Open2View (at least in NZ) seems to do. Look at practically any listing on there and you'll see the same thing.
This place is just up the road from us. I'm so tempted to see if they're having an open home just so I can go see it in person.
So this place is for real? Jayce, if they're not having an open house, why don't you just call the realtor and get them to show it to you. And then give us a report!
November 14, 2008 at 1:29 PM
Anonymous said...
Well I guess we've found the set to the CBS series SwingTown.
It's so COSMIC! I have an odd feeling of DeJaVu...as if I have actually been in this house...I just can't shake the creepy feeling!
November 15, 2008 at 8:44 AM
Anonymous said...
It's so COSMIC! I have an odd feeling of DeJaVu...as if I have actually been in this house...I just can't shake the creepy feeling!
November 15, 2008 at 8:44 AM
Anonymous said...
How can I save those pictures? I keep trying, but all I get are overly small images.
November 15, 2008 at 3:38 PM
Anonymous said...
I had to come back and stare at it again. It's not photoshop, it's real. Notice the carpet is approriately worn around the furniture and down the hall.
For some reason, it makes me sad this house is for sale. I'm imagining an elderly couple that passed on or went into a nursing home.
November 15, 2008 at 10:32 PM
Anonymous said...
This is a fantastic example of NZ architecture and decor from this period. I was raised in a house in Auckland eerily like this one, and I remember most relatives and family friends had very similar houses too. Something to do with extremely large Catholic families and the mid-level executive entertaining culture. Those massive lounges and kitsch bars really were put to use frequently, while all the kids were herded downstairs to the rumpus room.
This house shows craftsmanship by the builders who really cared about their work back then. Sure, it could've done with some renovations every decade or so, but you can't fault the quality of the place.
Anyone else notice the aqua intercom next to the toilet? @jayce - PLEASE tour this gem and find some backstory on the lovely people who built it!! @neal snow - for much bigger pics click the link in "Take the: Photo Tour" right above the main pic of the house. They've got a few jpeg artifacts, but you pick up many more fascinating details.
Tried to save pix and found that even the large ones are in javascript. In Windows, I used Ctrl-S to save them as "web page, complete" one by glorious one. If you want to go a step further you can then go into each "file folder" and save the largest "jpg file." Get rid of the rest and you've got all the photos. Whew! Please tell me there's an easier way.
That is just bizarre. It's like they set up the house in 1965 and never actually lived there. It's the house that time forgot. Bizarre!!!
November 17, 2008 at 5:57 PM
Anonymous said...
Don't go past the patchwork beanbag in the pool room!
November 18, 2008 at 2:49 AM
Anonymous said...
I remember going to a house kind of similar to this when I was a kid - in the 70's! Amazingly, that house was in Lower Hutt too. Hmmm. These photos put me in a serious time warp.
For the record - I believe that is not an intercom next to the toilet, but a toilet roll holder/radio.
My Nana had one exactly like it...
November 18, 2008 at 12:19 PM
Anonymous said...
What about the little indoor pond under the staircase. looooovely! This will be real, I looked at a house in a nearby area, it was equally 70's gross (in the nicest possible way).
I can't understand why people are going ga-ga over this, it's just an old person's house. In my job I visit people in their homes and I've seen dozens like this in Auckland, I think it's boring
November 19, 2008 at 7:10 AM
Anonymous said...
This house is amazing! I live in Auckland in a neighborhood of houses that were once like this, but have all been renovated beyond recognition :( I love the enormous hallways!! And that bar is huge!! I would love to throw a party there. I really hope the new owners appreciate the awesomeness of this place..
I'm totally with Meg- here's money, get out & leave ALL your stuff behind, because without it, this awesome, awesome house just wouldn't be the same. And yes, could someone please just drop a big plastic bubble over it to preserve is just as it is (and maybe charge admission for "time traveling"). Y'all have restored my faith in humanity- I thought I was a nutjob thinking "I WANT!!!!", but obviously I'm not alone in that sentiment.
When my parents finally leave this mortal plane and we try to sell their 1955 ranch house, we will be posting pictures of a finished basement covered in knotty pine with black and gray linoleum squares on the floor, and a ping-pong table and bumper pool. Dad's "office" is still down there, complete with dictaphone.
Their den also has wood paneling, and a complete World Book set, along with Norman Vincent Peale's "The Power of Positive Thinking."
Their home is a complete 1950s museum. Maybe I won't sell it after all, but just charge admission for a total '50s immersion experience . . .
I really don't know what all the fuss is about. This is what New Zealand is STILL like. Everyone here lives like this. When I came here in '98 and showed them a cellphone I was immediately given wizard status!
The amount of traffic generated by this blog had the agent mystified for a while - how much traffic? It made the NZ national news! Even better ... more photos.
Clearly, an estate sale. You can see the original owners in the photos on the office wall; squinting at the pictures you can see they were both judges (hence the funky black robes with weird white lace and wigs English barristers sport). And from the "shalom" plaque in the entryway and the beautiful silver menorah in the dining room, we know they were Jewish. (What gets me is why their heirs would leave behind something as personal as the menorah -- nice Jewish couples who built homes in 1960 with rumpus rooms and full sets of the Encyclopedia Britianica *always* had kids -- otherwise I wouldn't be here amazed at this link! So, sure, if you aren't April Wheeler in "Revolutionary Road" [the book, not the movie] you don't feel sentimentally attached to the White Horse mirror. But why leave your parent's Judaica behind?).
Also -- that entry way with the curved wall, the floating staircase and the indoor rock garden/fountain underneath? Never saw one in a private residence, but that is the splitting image of absolutely every single "kosher catering banquet hall" in and around the New York/New Jersey area in the 60s/70s. They all had that feature. In fact, when looking for a site for my wedding in '92, we frighteningly saw a few places that *still* had them. Only not as beautifully preserved as this gem in New Zealand!
Honestly, this really *SHOULD* be purchased as is by a historical society or museum and preserved as the most pristine, authentic mid-century architecture/furnishings in the world. No joke.
I love, love, love it. I went to school for a year (as an exchange student) in Lower Hutt and lived very close to this house. I wish I could go back and see it in person!
One of my host families had a home similar to this one. A bit smaller, but with lots of 1970s features, and it was completely immaculate and beautifully preserved.
I showed this place to my friend, who in turn showed it to her mother- who, in 1975, used to hang out and play pool in that very rumpus room during lunchtimes at the neighbouring high-school (where I went also)! There's a beautiful row of 1960s and 70s houses just around the corner, in a street named Wai-Iti Crescent- one of which is even more fabulously retro than this- it has a 'floating' lounge sited above the drive- under porte-cochere...
For those speculating, yes, the owners are Jewish, and they had two children. Lawyers wear wigs when they are admitted to the bar in New Zealand, though my friend's mother did not remember them being judges. The owner's brother was a cabinet minister, too- so I'm imagining the parties they had there were pretty classy, for Lower Hutt in 1968, anyway!
March 1, 2009 at 7:04 PM
[Image] [Image] [Image] Oh my god, this is wonderful. It was found by Gav who, I'm guessing from his Austin Powers comment, thought it was shagtastic. But I love it! Really! It's excellent! Look! It's like a museum, or a Dwell photo spread!
I'm buying it and moving in and keeping it that impeccably clean. I'll use an orange rotary phone, and listen to LPs, and look things up in World Book. I shall cook meals involving cans of condensed soup.
And then I'm going to hang up portraits of Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong-il in every room, just to finish the look.
"New "It's Lovely!" HQ"
74 Comments -
Wow, that place is a time capsule. And it's huge! You could swing a reasonably patient cat in the hallways!
Must. Have. Vinyl. Bar.
Apparently those people own nothing but liquor and barware.
November 13, 2008 at 6:18 PM
That is amazing. I'm in awe.
November 13, 2008 at 6:21 PM
Oh. My. God.
I love the Bradyness of this place. It totally makes me want to nail my co-star and then write a book about it 30 years later. But seriously, this is awesome. It's like Ikea threw up something it ate in a previous life.
I want this place. Oh yes.
November 13, 2008 at 6:25 PM
I love it when I walk into a home and cast a shadow on the wall.
November 13, 2008 at 6:31 PM
throw in a nipple-vase and it's like Jonathan Adler's dreams come true.
November 13, 2008 at 6:42 PM
I think the top photo is Michael Brady's home office.
November 13, 2008 at 7:00 PM
its so pristine that it looks almost fake...like some sims house 3D program of the future..a virtual home...only using real old 70's decor
November 13, 2008 at 7:20 PM
Someone needs to tell James Lileks at lileks.com about this. He's fanatical about classic 50s-60s decor - he'd have conniptions over this immaculate, perfectly preserved time capsule of awesomeness.
November 13, 2008 at 7:27 PM
When you buy it, will you need a housemate??
November 13, 2008 at 8:14 PM
Wow!
All it needs is that pole dancing pole from another post right next to the "Wines and Liquor" sign and the house is done.
Also, why does it seem like every photo is of the roof and the room is just sorta lucky to be in it?
November 13, 2008 at 8:20 PM
Does anyone else get a weird feeling like the decor is all photoshopped in? The shadows...the colors...it's weeeeirding me out.
November 13, 2008 at 9:10 PM
I have no idea why, but I love it.
November 13, 2008 at 9:20 PM
Wow, even the TV set is seriously retro. It's like the house that time forgot.
November 14, 2008 at 2:02 AM
The Brady's have already been mentioned - whew!
I just want to WALK all around that place. All those turns and corners? Wow!
November 14, 2008 at 2:29 AM
If that furniture is real, I'll eat the 70s-pattern chaise lounge.
That has all the looks of a photoshop disaster to me! I think it's that something seems off about the colors and the way the furniture doesn't quite blend around the edges and doesn't cast shadows in the right spots. And NOBODY has that many stamplike patterns on their walls!
November 14, 2008 at 6:07 AM
Just OMG. That's all - OMG.
I don't know what to say...even the TV and stereo are period. Not a thing out of place. No one ever really lived here, right?
November 14, 2008 at 6:12 AM
The angles are throwing me off. It looks like someone made it in The Sims.
November 14, 2008 at 6:44 AM
Do they have more than one pool table? I've been trying to figure it out for 5 minutes.
November 14, 2008 at 6:55 AM
I am so envious. Your new office space is extremely cool.
Or is it hep?
Swell?
November 14, 2008 at 6:59 AM
Is that a typewriter I see on the desk in the office? That's awesome. Interesting to note in the sales pitch they say "First time home is on the market since it was built." Really? With such modern conveniences as a typewriter and a color tv, I would have never guessed!
November 14, 2008 at 7:08 AM
I love the 70s! Even the stuff under the bar is neatly arranged in a perfect line. The pink toilet is my fav.
November 14, 2008 at 7:17 AM
Here's the story, of a lovely lady...
I see the Bradys have already been mentioned, so it isn't just me.
It's either the Bradys or the Twilight Zone. This place is just creepy.
November 14, 2008 at 7:22 AM
That is my dream house.
I love it.
November 14, 2008 at 7:26 AM
I agree with the commenters who suspect this is faked using photoshop or Sims or something. All those patterns, too-bright colors, the couch looks stretched, weight lighting...yeah. Unreal.
Also, the end of the post about hanging up those pictures TOTALLY cracked me up!
November 14, 2008 at 8:08 AM
I love that house! I don't understand where all their stuff is, but I love that house.
But how on earth did you escape putting the bar picture on the blog?
November 14, 2008 at 8:13 AM
I WANT THIS HOUSE.
today, now, really
and I love New Zealand, it is perfect, I have already written to an Aussie friend and told her we should buy it and move there..of course she will say no, but I am trying anyway
November 14, 2008 at 8:30 AM
I LOVE THIS HOUSE! Okay, yeah, a little redecorating is in order, but it's so big and open. Well, it's uncluttered. And so much LIGHT.
I don't think it's photo-shopped. My great-aunt's place had a similar feel... on a much smaller scale.
And it's Down Under... the light is just different there. And that would partially explain the time warp, too. :0)
November 14, 2008 at 8:39 AM
ooooo! SOOO CLOSE! There is a cordless phone in the bedroom.
Otherwise perfect set for the show "That 60's Show"
November 14, 2008 at 9:18 AM
I dig it! There's some definite camera lens stretching thing going on, however, unless their piano has 10 octaves. But you never know.
November 14, 2008 at 9:18 AM
It's what Tuscan kitchens will look like to people 40 years from now. :)
November 14, 2008 at 9:29 AM
Oh sweet jesus! I'll offer the sellers one million dollars right now to pack only their clothes and move out. Wait...I'll bet their clothes are awesome too. One mill to just leave.
This seriously makes me want to put on a girdle and apron, put an Esquivel record on, and serve my man (wearing a suit, of course) a martini! Gotta go fix my bouffant!
November 14, 2008 at 10:11 AM
LOL - World book...now that's obsolete!
November 14, 2008 at 10:20 AM
A rumpus room?? A rumpus room!!
I'm also loving the thought of having a conversation while sitting in the arm chairs in the formal living room:
Me: WHAT? I CAN'T HEAR YOU!
Guest: HUH? WHY ARE WE SITTING TWO MILES FROM EACH OTHER?
November 14, 2008 at 10:25 AM
And what's with all those weird angles? Something is definitely, ah...askew.
November 14, 2008 at 11:26 AM
Fabulous!
- Mid-C Frank
November 14, 2008 at 11:54 AM
Best. House. Evar.
First, I couldn't get over the padded bar. Then I started drooling over the kitchen. When I got to the office, I nearly fainted--is that a DICTAPHONE on that desk?
I think it is!
Some questionable furniture and light fixtures but overall, I'd buy it in a second if I had the money.
November 14, 2008 at 12:51 PM
Ah yes, the weird angles, that's the standard wide angle shot that Open2View (at least in NZ) seems to do. Look at practically any listing on there and you'll see the same thing.
This place is just up the road from us. I'm so tempted to see if they're having an open home just so I can go see it in person.
November 14, 2008 at 12:57 PM
So this place is for real? Jayce, if they're not having an open house, why don't you just call the realtor and get them to show it to you. And then give us a report!
November 14, 2008 at 1:29 PM
Well I guess we've found the set to the CBS series SwingTown.
November 14, 2008 at 5:14 PM
The best listings are all in NZ!
November 14, 2008 at 9:14 PM
Two more things, because I just can't help myself:
1) I so want to sit at that office desk and pretend that I'm Mr. Tate.
B) The bar is in the hallway, making it handy for grabbing a quick martini on the way to the linen closet.
That is all. Carry on.
November 14, 2008 at 11:52 PM
Old house junkie, I noticed that, too.
November 15, 2008 at 8:24 AM
It's so COSMIC! I have an odd feeling of DeJaVu...as if I have actually been in this house...I just can't shake the creepy feeling!
November 15, 2008 at 8:44 AM
It's so COSMIC! I have an odd feeling of DeJaVu...as if I have actually been in this house...I just can't shake the creepy feeling!
November 15, 2008 at 8:44 AM
How can I save those pictures? I keep trying, but all I get are overly small images.
November 15, 2008 at 3:38 PM
I had to come back and stare at it again. It's not photoshop, it's real. Notice the carpet is approriately worn around the furniture and down the hall.
For some reason, it makes me sad this house is for sale. I'm imagining an elderly couple that passed on or went into a nursing home.
November 15, 2008 at 10:32 PM
This is a fantastic example of NZ architecture and decor from this period. I was raised in a house in Auckland eerily like this one, and I remember most relatives and family friends had very similar houses too. Something to do with extremely large Catholic families and the mid-level executive entertaining culture. Those massive lounges and kitsch bars really were put to use frequently, while all the kids were herded downstairs to the rumpus room.
This house shows craftsmanship by the builders who really cared about their work back then. Sure, it could've done with some renovations every decade or so, but you can't fault the quality of the place.
November 16, 2008 at 10:40 AM
This post seems to have hit a nerve.
November 16, 2008 at 11:58 AM
Calling David Lynch! Calling David Lynch!
Anyone else notice the aqua intercom next to the toilet?
@jayce - PLEASE tour this gem and find some backstory on the lovely people who built it!!
@neal snow - for much bigger pics click the link in "Take the: Photo Tour" right above the main pic of the house. They've got a few jpeg artifacts, but you pick up many more fascinating details.
November 16, 2008 at 12:04 PM
Tried to save pix and found that even the large ones are in javascript. In Windows, I used Ctrl-S to save them as "web page, complete" one by glorious one.
If you want to go a step further you can then go into each "file folder" and save the largest "jpg file." Get rid of the rest and you've got all the photos.
Whew!
Please tell me there's an easier way.
November 16, 2008 at 1:00 PM
FonHom: I just drag 'em to my desktop.
November 16, 2008 at 1:07 PM
Thanks Sara! Sometimes the easiest methods are the best.
November 16, 2008 at 2:38 PM
What would it take to get floorplans for this house?
November 16, 2008 at 2:46 PM
Trust me, this look is quite common in both Australia and NZ.
November 16, 2008 at 7:22 PM
Also in the Twilight Zone and at the Bradys'.
November 16, 2008 at 7:35 PM
that's awesome, the perfect place for cheese fondue!
November 17, 2008 at 7:20 AM
That is just bizarre. It's like they set up the house in 1965 and never actually lived there. It's the house that time forgot. Bizarre!!!
November 17, 2008 at 5:57 PM
Don't go past the patchwork beanbag in the pool room!
November 18, 2008 at 2:49 AM
I remember going to a house kind of similar to this when I was a kid - in the 70's! Amazingly, that house was in Lower Hutt too. Hmmm. These photos put me in a serious time warp.
I'm coming Mum....
November 18, 2008 at 8:47 AM
It is the FONDUE HOUSE. Filled with cheesy goodness that went out of style when I was a toddler.
What I don't understand is how I could be the first person to add this gem of a post to StumbleUpon!
November 18, 2008 at 11:40 AM
For the record - I believe that is not an intercom next to the toilet, but a toilet roll holder/radio.
My Nana had one exactly like it...
November 18, 2008 at 12:19 PM
What about the little indoor pond under the staircase. looooovely! This will be real, I looked at a house in a nearby area, it was equally 70's gross (in the nicest possible way).
November 18, 2008 at 4:46 PM
I can't understand why people are going ga-ga over this, it's just an old person's house. In my job I visit people in their homes and I've seen dozens like this in Auckland, I think it's boring
November 19, 2008 at 7:10 AM
This house is amazing! I live in Auckland in a neighborhood of houses that were once like this, but have all been renovated beyond recognition :( I love the enormous hallways!! And that bar is huge!! I would love to throw a party there. I really hope the new owners appreciate the awesomeness of this place..
November 19, 2008 at 6:51 PM
This thing really demands wall-to-wall heritage protection. Doug's right, these places are more common than you'd think, but not for long.
Pretty awesome stuff which sadly will probably not survive the next buyer.
November 20, 2008 at 7:25 PM
I'm totally with Meg- here's money, get out & leave ALL your stuff behind, because without it, this awesome, awesome house just wouldn't be the same. And yes, could someone please just drop a big plastic bubble over it to preserve is just as it is (and maybe charge admission for "time traveling"). Y'all have restored my faith in humanity- I thought I was a nutjob thinking "I WANT!!!!", but obviously I'm not alone in that sentiment.
November 23, 2008 at 1:11 AM
When my parents finally leave this mortal plane and we try to sell their 1955 ranch house, we will be posting pictures of a finished basement covered in knotty pine with black and gray linoleum squares on the floor, and a ping-pong table and bumper pool. Dad's "office" is still down there, complete with dictaphone.
Their den also has wood paneling, and a complete World Book set, along with Norman Vincent Peale's "The Power of Positive Thinking."
Their home is a complete 1950s museum. Maybe I won't sell it after all, but just charge admission for a total '50s immersion experience . . .
I love this blog, BTW . . .
November 23, 2008 at 1:41 PM
I really don't know what all the fuss is about. This is what New Zealand is STILL like. Everyone here lives like this. When I came here in '98 and showed them a cellphone I was immediately given wizard status!
November 26, 2008 at 9:01 AM
It looks freaky photoshopped, but the furniture is consistent through all the pics. Its really weird.
Robert: Maybe you should come out from under your rock and leave then.
December 1, 2008 at 8:52 PM
There's a discussion here about the camera involved, by the way:
http://ask.metafilter.com/108028/Camera-lens-question
December 2, 2008 at 7:12 AM
The amount of traffic generated by this blog had the agent mystified for a while - how much traffic? It made the NZ national news! Even better ... more photos.
http://tinyurl.com/chzxe7
January 30, 2009 at 3:48 PM
Clearly, an estate sale. You can see the original owners in the photos on the office wall; squinting at the pictures you can see they were both judges (hence the funky black robes with weird white lace and wigs English barristers sport). And from the "shalom" plaque in the entryway and the beautiful silver menorah in the dining room, we know they were Jewish. (What gets me is why their heirs would leave behind something as personal as the menorah -- nice Jewish couples who built homes in 1960 with rumpus rooms and full sets of the Encyclopedia Britianica *always* had kids -- otherwise I wouldn't be here amazed at this link! So, sure, if you aren't April Wheeler in "Revolutionary Road" [the book, not the movie] you don't feel sentimentally attached to the White Horse mirror. But why leave your parent's Judaica behind?).
Also -- that entry way with the curved wall, the floating staircase and the indoor rock garden/fountain underneath? Never saw one in a private residence, but that is the splitting image of absolutely every single "kosher catering banquet hall" in and around the New York/New Jersey area in the 60s/70s. They all had that feature. In fact, when looking for a site for my wedding in '92, we frighteningly saw a few places that *still* had them. Only not as beautifully preserved as this gem in New Zealand!
Honestly, this really *SHOULD* be purchased as is by a historical society or museum and preserved as the most pristine, authentic mid-century architecture/furnishings in the world. No joke.
February 18, 2009 at 9:00 PM
I love, love, love it. I went to school for a year (as an exchange student) in Lower Hutt and lived very close to this house. I wish I could go back and see it in person!
One of my host families had a home similar to this one. A bit smaller, but with lots of 1970s features, and it was completely immaculate and beautifully preserved.
February 21, 2009 at 10:05 PM
I showed this place to my friend, who in turn showed it to her mother- who, in 1975, used to hang out and play pool in that very rumpus room during lunchtimes at the neighbouring high-school (where I went also)! There's a beautiful row of 1960s and 70s houses just around the corner, in a street named Wai-Iti Crescent- one of which is even more fabulously retro than this- it has a 'floating' lounge sited above the drive- under porte-cochere...
For those speculating, yes, the owners are Jewish, and they had two children. Lawyers wear wigs when they are admitted to the bar in New Zealand, though my friend's mother did not remember them being judges. The owner's brother was a cabinet minister, too- so I'm imagining the parties they had there were pretty classy, for Lower Hutt in 1968, anyway!
March 1, 2009 at 7:04 PM