After being displayed at architecture shows, it was installed at multiple locations in New York, and was later transferred to the Palm Springs Art Museum, where it is currently on view as an exhibit.
In 1932, the house was exhibited again, this time at the Architectural League of New York show sponsored by the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA).
[1] After the early exhibitions, the house was sold to architect Wallace K. Harrison for $1,000 (equivalent to $22,332 in 2023), who disassembled it and moved it to his Long Island estate, where it became the core of an extensive complex.
Initial plans called for it to be rebuilt in a park opposite the Palm Springs Art Museum, pending a $475,000 fund raising effort for its restoration.
Exterior walls consist of corrugated metal sheathing backed by waterproof paper over a structure of two-inch steel angles.