Stepping inside feels like entering a preserved time capsule, with original Neutra-designed furniture and family artifacts still on display. The signature modernist design features, like mitered glass corners and an integrated fountain, create a distinct mid-century ambiance.
This National Historic Landmark was designed by Vienna-born architect Richard Neutra in a "barbell" shape, with a wing on either end for different generations to "reunite" in the central space. Neutra and his wife Dione moved into the house in 1963, and their son Dion lived there until his passing in 2019.