A. Conger Goodyear House
The A. Conger Goodyear House is a historic home located in the Village of Old Westbury in Nassau County, New York, United States. HistoryThe house was built in 1938 in the International style. The house was designed by architect Edward Durell Stone, and was owned by businessman and philanthropist Anson Conger Goodyear. The house has 6,000 square feet of space, five bedrooms and five and a half baths and currently sits on a five-and-a-half-acre lot.[2] The home has been described as "a remarkable balancing act between the austerity of the then·developing high modernism of Mies van der Rohe and the warm, site-oriented romantic functionalism of earlier American masters like Frank Lloyd Wright."[3] When Goodyear died in 1964, the home was left unoccupied until 1970, when the family donated the house to the New York Institute of Technology for use as the president's house. In 1997, NYIT sold it to Wheatley Construction Company, which had planned to raze it for new development.[2] The World Monuments Fund campaigned to save it, starting in 2001, and eventually bought it in 2005.[2] Later that year, the fund sold it to the Modernist design dealer Troy Halterman [4] with constrictive limitations on renovations to the interior and exterior, though the lot was reduced from 100 acres. Halterman never moved in, and sold the house in 2007 to Eric Cohler, an interior designer [4] who spent a purported US$2 million in renovations. The home was sold to art and architecture collector Aby Rosen in 2011.[5] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the New York State Register of Historic Places in 2003.[1][6] ImportanceIn his 1962 memoir, The Evolution of an Architect, Edward Durell Stone wrote:
Of the house's eaves, he wrote:
Robert A.M. Stern, dean of the Yale School of Architecture, told The New York Times, "It's one of the few great International Style houses by an American architect of the 1930s. It's a great country house as well and surprisingly luxurious in a Busby Berkeley-meets-Bauhaus kind of way."[8] The New Yorker architecture critic, Paul Goldberger, called the Goodyear home "one of the most important houses built in the United States between the two world wars."[9] Gallery
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