Here are some interesting houses by Greek architect Takis Zenetos, whose work we first looked at way back in 2009.
[Image: House by Takis Zenetos (1961) from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
I will confess to knowing almost nothing about these projects, but I wanted to post the images anyway; they’re from a book called Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977), which was originally pointed out to me in the comments of that earlier post.
[Image: House by Takis Zenetos (1961) from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
The designs draw heavily on cantilevers and porches, presumably in response to some difficult hillside sites, but incorporating the planes, glass, and open views typical of domestic Modernism.
[Image: House by Takis Zenetos (1961) from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
As such, these could just as well be found in the hills of Los Angeles or even San Francisco.
This next home is a variation on the same basic vocabulary, from the same year (1961), this time apparently in a vineyard or other semi-rural setting.
[Images: Another home by Takis Zenetos (1961) from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
As you can see in that last sketch (bottom right), his houses are almost like Corbusian airplanes—Modernist box kites the size of houses—trying to lift off from the earth.
Then a sketch from 1962 really abstracts all this to a pure assemblage of planes in space, just rooftops and cantilevers hanging over the landscape.
It’s the home as super-ceiling.
[Image: A sketch from 1962 by Takis Zenetos, from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
It basically distills the structure of this next project, another hillside house from 1959.
[Images: House by Takis Zenetos (1959) from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
This one really could be in Los Angeles, for its aggressive cantilever out over the canyon or gorge below.
But now check out this next project, a stunning proposal from 1954 for some kind of amphitheater hewn directly into the landscape, then framed by monolithic blocks of Modernist rock.
[Image: A proposal from 1954 by Takis Zenetos, from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
It’s as much a quarry as it is a building, as much a building as it is just an inspired reorganization of the site’s geology.
It also seems like a set designer’s dream—a craggy, otherworldly gathering place like something from the Greek myths (or a level in a future computer game).
[Image: Alas, I don’t have this in higher res; a proposal from 1954 by Takis Zenetos, from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
Finally, purely for its eye candy, here is a project that is either part of a hotel, a restaurant, or a club, from 1956.
[Image: A proposal from 1956 by Takis Zenetos, from Takis Ch. Zenetos (1926-1977)].
For more Zenetos, check out the earlier post here on BLDGBLOG and follow some of the many links in the comment thread. And, of course, if you read Greek and have some insight into what these projects actually are, by all means, let us all know!