NEUTRA VDL

  • Richard Neutra
  • 2300 Silver Lake Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90039

Viennese-American architect Richard Neutra built the VDL Research House in Silver Lake, Los Angeles for himself and his family in 1932. The house was named after its benefactor, Dutch philanthropist Cees H. van der Leeuw, a Rotterdam industrialist who admired Neutra's work and wanted to support his experimental vision for modern living.

The original house was a pioneering example of International Style architecture in California, featuring an open floor plan, flat roof, and extensive glass to blur boundaries between interior and exterior. Neutra used the house as both a residence and laboratory for testing new materials and spatial concepts. The family lived on the upper floors while Neutra maintained his architectural office on the ground level.

In 1963, the original house was destroyed by fire, along with Neutra's irreplaceable collection of sketches, writings, and architecture library. The loss was profound, but Neutra was determined to rebuild. He and his son Dion designed and constructed a new house on the same site with slight design changes reflecting three decades of architectural evolution.

The rebuilt VDL II incorporated lessons learned from the original while responding to changes in Neutra's design philosophy and available technology. It maintained the spirit of transparency and connection to nature but with refinements in proportion, detail, and material expression.

After Richard Neutra's death in 1970, his widow Dione continued to live in the house. Upon her death in 1990, the house was donated to California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. The university established the Cal Poly Pomona College of Environmental Design, which maintains the VDL Research House as a study center and museum. Architecture students and faculty use the house for research, exhibitions, and events. Today, visitors can tour VDL II by appointment.