Built in the 1960s and now asking $4.2M, the Frank Lloyd Wright–inspired Mirrabooka House sits on five acres of magnificent gardens.
Sydney-born architect and landscape designer Bruce Rickard was once described as the Frank Lloyd Wright of Australian architecture. While certainly inspired by Wright whom he first studied at the University of Pennsylvania in the 1950s Rickard also used his formal training of both indoor and outdoor plans to harmoniously adapt Wrightsonian ideas to Australia’s native landscape and climate. An exceptional example of these dual talents is the Mirrabooka House, originally built in the early 1960s and now on the market for the first time since its construction.
Inside the spectacular suburban hideaway inspired by a 1959 Hollywood thriller - complete with a Japanese garden oasis, a sunlit living room and a sunken saltwater swimming pool
A hillside house 15 minutes drive from Sydney CBD was inspired by a mansion in an iconic Hollywood movie
The design was based on the house atop Mount Rushmore in Alfred Hitchcock s thriller, North by Northwest
Built in 1961 by Australian architect Bruce Rickard, the lavish estate has a Japanese garden and sunken pool
Inside are five bedrooms, a home office, a wine cellar and a cinema room that opens onto a balcony
A striking stone fireplace is the centrepiece of the enormous open-plan living and dining room