The Firm Behind the Legendary Apple Store Reimagines a Nike VP’s 1950s Home
When Greg Hoffman and Kirsten Brady decided to give up their Tudor-style home in Portland, Oregon, and go modern, their preference was initially to build new. Then, at their realtor’s suggestion, they went to see the view from the so-called "View-Master House" in the Council Crest neighborhood, the highest point in the city. Designed in the early 1950s by architect Roscoe Hemenway for inventor Karl Kurtz—who developed stereoscopic devices for Sawyer’s, maker of the famous View-Master toy—the house offered a panoramic vista of both the downtown and snow-capped peaks of the Cascade mountain range in the distance.
Join Dwell+ to Continue
Subscribe to Dwell+ to get everything you already love about Dwell, plus exclusive home tours, video features, how-to guides, access to the Dwell archive, and more. You can cancel at any time.
Already a Dwell+ subscriber? Sign In
Published
Last Updated