The design of the Glass Pavilion by Steve Hermann is inspired by modernist icons like Mies Van Der Rohe's Barcelona Pavilion and Philip Johnson's Glass House. The Glass Pavilion located in Santa Barbara, California, almost entirely made of glass, allowing occupants to feel enveloped in nature while being comfortably inside at 13,875 square feet and is set on a 3.5-acre estate. View article at Glass Pavilion by Steve Hermann
Glass Pavilion by Steve Hermann
The Glass Pavilion is a redefining structure within modernism. It is a benchmark building that sets the bar as to...More info: Vipp452 Swivel chair Pioneer RT-909 Audemars Piguet Tourbillon Maximo riera walrus chair
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Last update at 17 · 07 · by milo
‧‧‧ One of 85The Glass Pavilion is a redefining structure within modernism. It is a benchmark building that sets the bar as to what modernism is and can be. Throughout the last century there has been a few great buildings that defined modernism and inspired a generation to imagine what is possible not only within architecture but as a society as a whole.
Mies Van Der Rohe’s Barcelona Pavilion and Farnsworth house, as well as Phillip Johnson’s glass house were these type of defining structures. Now, Steve Hermann’s Glass Pavilion takes the architectural tenants of these greats and catapults these concepts into the new millennium.
Glass Pavilion Gallery
Glass Pavilion adress
The Glass Pavilion by Steve Hermann is a modernist architecture, completed in 2010 and located in 780 Ashley Rd, Montecito, CA 93108, USA. This 13,875-square-foot luxury home is almost entirely made of glass, allowing its occupants to feel immersed in nature while enjoying the comforts of a high-end residence.
The Glass Pavilion after the Montecito mudslide flood:

The Glass Pavilion features five bedrooms, five-and-a-half bathrooms, a kitchen with a wine room, and even an art gallery displaying the architect’s vintage car collection. Built with Star Fire glass, a highly transparent material usually reserved for jewelry displays, the home appears to float above the landscape thanks to massive structural steel beams.



