Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Architecture Wednesday: The Armour-Stiner Octagon House

Not one of the normal ISBL architecture features, but Carlos saw this home on Aerial America and I found it on the interwebz, so here it is via Joseph Pell Lombardi:

"The Armour-Stiner (Octagon) House is one of the most visually unique homes in the world. It is the only known residence constructed in the eight-sided, domed colonnaded shape of a classic Roman Temple.

The Octagon House was originally built in the 1860s following the publication of The Octagon House, a Home for All by Orson Squire Fowler, a phrenologist, sexologist and amateur architect. Fowler advocated octagonal instead of four-sided houses on the supposition that the shape enclosed more space, created rooms which received twice as much sunlight and had greater accessibility to each other.

In 1872, the house was purchased by Joseph Stiner, a prominent New York City tea merchant. His alterations created the present lyrical structure. The exterior embellishments are extraordinarily festive with floral detailing in the cast iron cresting and railings and elaborately carved wood scrollwork and capitals – all painted in shades of rose, blue, violet and red. The interiors are equally decorative with painted and stenciled ceilings, trim with gold, silver and bronze leaf and unique 8-sided motifs in the plasterwork, woodwork and etched glass.

Subsequent owners of the house have been imaginative people. In the 1930s it was occupied by Aleko E. Lilius, a Finnish writer and explorer who had lived with a female pirate who plundered ships off the coast of China. Carl Carmer, the celebrated author, poet and historian, resided in the house from 1946 to the time of his death in 1976. The house plays a role in a number of his published tales, including stories of a resident ghost.

Shortly after the death of Carl Carmer, the house was acquired by the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Unstable and in need of restoration, it was the first house to be resold to a private citizen. Joseph Pell Lombardi, the owner, is a Preservation Architect who has conserved the house, interiors, grounds and outbuildings."


as always ... click to emBIGGERate
The Entry Hall
The Salon
The Library
The Dining Room
The Kitchen
The Solarium
The Egyptian Revival Music Room
The Master Bedroom
The Dance Room
The Observatory
The Observatory from Outside
The Veranda
The Veranda Lamps
The Garden Stairs
The Foxglove Garden
Inside The Foxglove Garden
The Well House
The Carriage House and Barn
From the Northeast
The Dome in Winter
The Basement Plan
The 1st Floor Plan
The 2nd Floor Plan
The 3rd Floor Plan
The 4th Floor Plan
The Observatory Floor Plan

8 comments:

  1. cool! we have an octagon house here in michigan but it's nowhere as cool.

    xxalainaxx

    ReplyDelete
  2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randall_House_%28Mayville,_Michigan%29

    ReplyDelete
  3. I hope the stairwell is wide enough for my crinolines.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous10:41 PM

    Bob,

    I too love architecture. I'm interested in how things are fabricated, especially the little architectural details.

    Where does your interest in architecture come from?

    Just curious.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous11:10 PM

    This is really cool!

    ReplyDelete
  6. There seems to have been a fad for octagons for a while, there are still a couple here in San Francisco. One is a museum, donated because the last owner said trying to live in it was so impossible.

    ReplyDelete
  7. @Sean R
    I've just always loved it.
    Perhaps in a former life I was an architect?

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous3:55 PM

    I considered, when I was a kid, trying to become an architect in this present. I took some architectural drawing classes, and got scared off by the sheer amount of detail to keep track of.

    So... what did I end up doing? I eventually went into software development. Can you say "out of the frying pan, into the fire?" :-)

    ReplyDelete

Say anything, but keep it civil .......