[1][2] Eventually, in 1946, he found himself at the Technical University in Graz, Austria, where he pursued an interest in engineering and industrial design, with an emphasis on architecture.
[3][1] In 1958, Sedletzky left Victor Gruen Associates and joined the small architectural firm of Robert C. Jones in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, to be closer to his mother.
[5] The Jackson House, was built in 1962 in Carmel Meadows, overlooking Point Lobos, drawing inspiration from the architectural principles of both Le Corbusier and Frank Lloyd Wright.
To protect the house from storms, Sedletzky and a structural engineer decided to pour concrete columns in the sand.
on the beach to build a house for himself and his wife, Casa Concha, in a Mexican fishing village of Bahía Kino, Sonora, Mexico.