Please note that advance registration is required for this online program.
When it was built near Angleton in the early 1970s, the House of the Century — a weekend getaway for Houston art patron Marilyn Oshman and her family — was a vision of the future, with a curvy concrete shell, Plexiglas entrance tunnel and snoopy built-in furniture. The interiors were ripped out after a 1985 flood, and today the house is a vine-covered shell. But there is still nothing quite like the quirky remnant of ’70s architectural counterculture, which comes with its own set of preservation questions: Should the house be restored or left to rot, moved or replicated? Join author and architecture critic Mark Lamster for an online program looking at the history and future of this one-of-a-kind structure. This program is presented in partnership with Houston Mod and the Society for Commercial Archaeology.