"The Autohaus is a car collectors? garage and residence in central Texas. The design features compact living quarters, expressed as a single mass, floating above an open a...
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The thing just isn't attractive to me! It has some weird angles not related to anything.
I bet the neighbor next door with those picture windows is real happy!

Same here. I don't understand the current trend in high-dollar custom houses that says they should look like a conference center. Make it look like a house. This is a lot more appealing than the corporate retreat idea:
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Even though it isn't my 'cup of tea' as far as aesthetics, I enjoy seeing 'outside the box' thinking and design. If we all liked exactly the same things, what a boring world it would be.

So... uhh... yeah... I love this Autohaus thing. All of that glass... all of that steel... the cantilevered car port... the crisp white... I love it all.
The crowds of women that would assemble on the lawn at bath time would kill the grass.
Very cool and interesting, but really, it is only a plaything for some trillionaire. I like working garages, the ones where stuff gets fixed, things get done one way or another, on a budget or no budget at all, where there's dirty, greasy, leaky, old, rusty projects that need work by someone who has pride in their work. These palaces that look like hospital surgery rooms are neat to look at, have floors you can eat off of, and nothing happens there. Nobody gets dirty, the floor stays waxed and spotless, and the butlers pick up every speck of dust as it gently falls out of the filtered, air conditioned air. And while I'm on my soapbox, why hasn't anyone said anything about the spotless, shiny, restored vehicles? Maybe lack of respect because the work was purchased? I'd rather have Ryan's Atomic Garage or Jack's 12 Gauge Garage, where stuff happens, hands get dirty, mistakes are made and owned, pride in workmanship still exists, and projects get done. Respect is earned, you can't buy it. Especially here.![]()
The only problem with modern architecture is that it’s modern as per our current standards. Look at what was considered modern only 15 years ago and you realize that these types of design generally age very, very badly.
Very cool and interesting, but really, it is only a plaything for some trillionaire. I like working garages, the ones where stuff gets fixed, things get done one way or another, on a budget or no budget at all, where there's dirty, greasy, leaky, old, rusty projects that need work by someone who has pride in their work. These palaces that look like hospital surgery rooms are neat to look at, have floors you can eat off of, and nothing happens there. Nobody gets dirty, the floor stays waxed and spotless, and the butlers pick up every speck of dust as it gently falls out of the filtered, air conditioned air. And while I'm on my soapbox, why hasn't anyone said anything about the spotless, shiny, restored vehicles? Maybe lack of respect because the work was purchased? I'd rather have Ryan's Atomic Garage or Jack's 12 Gauge Garage, where stuff happens, hands get dirty, mistakes are made and owned, pride in workmanship still exists, and projects get done. Respect is earned, you can't buy it. Especially here.![]()
Yeah, the cantilever provides a great covered area for hanging out or working.
I love it. I have told my wife many times that my dream house would be a garage with a small attached apartment.
I couldn't live in an all-glass living area. The crowds of women that would assemble on the lawn at bath time would kill the grass. But, I really like and appreciate modern architecture and I think that place is awesome.
The only problem with modern architecture is that it’s modern as per our current standards. Look at what was considered modern only 15 years ago and you realize that these types of design generally age very, very badly.

I'd rather have Ryan's Atomic Garage or Jack's 12 Gauge Garage
It has some weird angles not related to anything.

Matt Risinger was the contractor on that house. He's posted a bunch of videos from during construction about different aspects of the build.
A quick YouTube search is worth the effort.
Did anybody notice that the back part of the upstairs is totally open to the whole downstairs garage? Can you imagine the fumes and smells? This would be headache city. Now granted, I keep my garage clean and pollutant free as much as possible but what about the time you spill antifreeze while draining the radiator or worse, pull off a fuel line (even fully depressured) and sprinkle gasoline around. Straight into the living space even while you're madly wiping it up.
I love the modern design but it's worse than non-functional. Even my relatively new and totally leak free BMW still smells like a car in my garage
