- Wallace Neff
Wallace Neff (
1895 –June 8 ,1982 ) was anarchitect based inSouthern California and was largely responsible for developing the region's distinct architectural style.Neff primarily drew from the architectural tradition of both
Spain and the Mediterranean as a whole, gaining extensive recognition from the number of celebrity commissions, notablyPickfair , the mansion belonging originally toMary Pickford andDouglas Fairbanks .Neff also designed the airform or "bubble" house, a distinctive form of inexpensive housing, in the late
1930 s. It was a dome-shaped construction made of reinforcedconcrete that was cast in position over an inflatable balloon. Though the design did not gain support in the U.S. it was used for large housing projects inEgypt ,Brazil , andWest Africa , and during the 1940’s and 50’s.In 2001, Hollywood aristocrats
Brad Pitt andJennifer Aniston supposedly paid $14 million for a Neff house once owned by actorFredric March , in addition to the philanthropist and USC trusteeWallis Annenberg . In 1998, actressDiane Keaton , an avid Wallace Neff fan, purchased a low-slung Neff house inBeverly Hills (featured in "Architectural Digest" July 1999) with the front lawn covered in lavender, for an undisclosed sum. This home was later purchased by Madonna andGuy Ritchie , and is still in their possession as of 2007.External links
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E05E1DF163BF932A25755C0A964948260&sec=&spon=&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink Obituary in the New York Times]
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