Indian Hill House

[4] An extensive photographic study of the house, then only a few years old, was taken for the Winter 1967 issue of Harvard Art Review.

"[6] He goes on to write that this family house is "a place of real options and opportunities [that] can be richly interpreted by whoever is living in it."

[7] In his 1989 work, Architecture and Urbanism, Henry Plummer concluded of this house that it contained "innumerable locales, of fragmentary rooms loosely interlocked, of zones both intimate and grand, created for an almost endless array of eyes, and heads and bodies and voices, an abundance which no longer bears upon the needs of a single person.

[13] Indian Hill House is set on 7 acres (28,000 m2) at the uphill woodland end of Skyfields Drive.

Its Indian Hill Road access was closed and the approach changed to Skyfields Drive when the original, larger property was subdivided in March 2000.

Southwest view of Indian Hill House, Winter 2017.
Northern view of Indian Hill House.
Southeast view of Indian Hill House.