Frey House II – Palm Springs, California - Atlas Obscura

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Frey House II

With beautiful views and every detail perfectly considered, one of the geniuses of modern architecture built himself the perfect home. 

Sponsored by Visit Palm Springs
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Palm Springs has long been the epicenter of midcentury modern design. Of the many preserved midcentury houses in Palm Springs, one of the shining examples is Frey House II, former home of architect Albert Frey.

Born in 1903 in Switzerland, Frey worked for Le Corbusier in Paris before moving to Palm Springs in 1934. He spent the remaining six decades of his life making the city an exemplar of midcentury modern design. He’s responsible for Palm Springs’ Aerial Tramway Valley Station, its City Hall, and a private home once owned by Elvis Presley called “Graceland West.”

Frey House II was completed in 1964 after years of careful consideration. It took Frey five years to choose the site, partway up Mount San Jacinto. He then took another year to consider how the sun moved across the land. Then he began building. At the time it was completed, Frey House II was the highest elevation home in Palm Springs, giving it views of town and further across the Coachella Valley.

The home is modest, only 800 square feet. But every detail is exactly right: the glass walls that allow panoramic views and blur the boundaries between inside and out. The swimming pool which also serves as the roof of the parking area. The slope of the roof, which matches the slope of the mountain. The built-in furniture and the yellow curtains which mirror the daisy-like brittlebush flowers that bloom in the spring. Frey designed his home to be in harmony with the desert, to the extent that a large border is incorporated into the house, jutting through the glass walls and boldly dividing the living area from the sleeping area, disrupting the otherwise clean lines. And that year studying the sun paid off: Frey oriented his home so that it gets as much shade as possible in the summer, and as much sun as possible in the winter.

Albert Frey bequeathed his home to the Palm Springs Art Museum upon his death in 1998. Tours of the streamlined, handsome home are now available through the museum during its twice-annual Modernism Weeks and through a third-party contractor year-round.

Know Before You Go

Frey House II is only open to the public for guided tours during Modernism Week or via the Palm Springs Art Museum website.

Sponsored by Visit Palm Spring. Explore more here.

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