MY Architecture

MY Architecture An architecture, interiors, and planning firm in Philadelphia with deep expertise in urban mixed-use

The early modern architect Adolf Loos, who famously wrote “Ornament is a Crime,” also had a romantic streak, not unlike ...
05/29/2026

The early modern architect Adolf Loos, who famously wrote “Ornament is a Crime,” also had a romantic streak, not unlike Carlo Mollino (see last week). In 1930 Adolf Loos completed two buildings: the (famous, urban) Müller House in Prague and the (not famous, rural) Landhaus Khuner (Khuner Villa) in Payerbach, Austria – two designs that could not be more different in appearance. While the Müller House is defined by an austere white cubic aesthetic, the Landhaus Khuner, is rustic, with log-and-stone construction sheltered under a pitched roof. The Müller House is hailed as a masterpiece of early modern architecture, while concerning the Landhaus Khuner, in contrast, there has developed only a sort of hush. We need to re-examine the Landhaus Khuner in order to embrace a broader understanding of what really constitutes architecture for today. You can visit, because today the house is a restaurant (and the colors are original).

Our poolhouse is not for sale, but you have a chance to buy Villa K2, Carlo Mollino’s modernist masterpiece on Italy’s L...
05/21/2026

Our poolhouse is not for sale, but you have a chance to buy Villa K2, Carlo Mollino’s modernist masterpiece on Italy’s Lake Maggiore for a mere $2.2 Million!

The floating 1950s retreat retains many of the legendary Italian designer’s original interiors and custom furnishings (like the coathooks in the last photo). Mollino, who became famous for blending surrealism, engineering, and sensual Italian modernism into his work, designed the property to feel almost suspended in nature. Built in 1953 in the village of Agra in Lombardy, the current owner’s great-grandfather, Luigi Cattaneo, commissioned midcentury Italian architect Carlo Mollino to design the stone-and-timber home as a holiday retreat. In addition to being an architect, Mollino was also a bon vivant, pl***oy, skier, interior designer, furniture designer and photographer of risqué Polaroids. (Not too risqué example at the end.) One of his best-known buildings is Turin’s Teatro Regio, with voluptuous red interiors, of which he oversaw the rebuilding in the late 1960s and early ’70s, decades after a fire destroyed the original theater.

Nature, light and architecture. More of our pool pavilion for a suburban Philadelphia location.
05/14/2026

Nature, light and architecture. More of our pool pavilion for a suburban Philadelphia location.

Filtered light is the best! Our pool pavilion in suburban Philadelphia compared to the apartment complex clubhouse we sh...
05/01/2026

Filtered light is the best! Our pool pavilion in suburban Philadelphia compared to the apartment complex clubhouse we shared two weeks ago: both at home in their natural setting, the filtering of light reminding one of the dappled light that reaches the ground under the tree canopy. Soothing and life affirming.

Home Sweet Home - Spring has sprung!
04/24/2026

Home Sweet Home - Spring has sprung!

Skylights, yes! A conservatory is a tremendous addtion to a home at any scale, from a grouping of potted plants on a lar...
04/10/2026

Skylights, yes! A conservatory is a tremendous addtion to a home at any scale, from a grouping of potted plants on a large window sill to a traditional skylit sunroom. Here is a current MY Architecture project for a conservatory addition that is a contempory interpretation of two sources of inspiration (the last two photos): a Victorian green house, in this case the Fernery at Morris Arboretum outside Philadelphia, and a traditional Japanese wooden bath.

What is the connection between daylight and shopping? That, too, has ancient origins. Trajan's Markets in Rome of approx...
04/03/2026

What is the connection between daylight and shopping? That, too, has ancient origins. Trajan's Markets in Rome of approximately 110 CE are considered to be the first multi-level shopping mall, though the upper levels could also have been offices (not unlike a contemporary indoor mall). The maze of a an Islamic Bazaar can only be lit from above. Jumping forward to the 19th century, the invention of the department store required new buildings with appropriate grandeur, to celebrate the glories of shopping. So immediately skylit central courts were created, starting in Paris, as shown here in a contemporary photo of the court at Printemps. Of course, here in Philadelphia we have Wannamakers, now unfortunately devoid of shoppers. The Fremont Street experience in Las Vegas, brings the street literally inside a suitably spectacular enclosure with a suitably Vegas light show. And now in Chengdu, PRC, the tradition of the enclosed shopping paradise continues in what is currently the world's largest building!

The atrium traces its history back to the Roman domus, the upper class townhouse. The atrium was the open central court ...
03/19/2026

The atrium traces its history back to the Roman domus, the upper class townhouse. The atrium was the open central court with enclosed rooms on all sides. In the middle of the atrium was the impluvium, a shallow pool sunken into the floor to catch rainwater from the roof. Paradoxically for us, the term in Latin came from atr, black, or dark. The atrium was a dark space. In the domus as in the Pantheon, the contrasting image of the sun moving across the relatively dark interior in the course of a day is a sort of sundial, keeping the movement of the heavens and the passage of time top of mind. What follows are some of my favorite mid 20th century atriums, all of which avoid cliched responses:

1. The House of Menander, Pompeii, 2. The Pantheon in an 18th C. painting, 3. The Guggenheim, FLlW, 4.The Ford Foundation, Roche and Dinkeloo, 5. Exeter library, Kahn, 6. The Thompson Center, Murphy Jahn, before its current evisceration by Google

Skylights again... In our own work we jump at the chance to accept the sun into a building to support the goals of the o...
03/13/2026

Skylights again... In our own work we jump at the chance to accept the sun into a building to support the goals of the owner. At 3737 Chestnut, a 25 story apartment building on land owned by the Epsicopal Cathedral of Philadelphia supported renovations to the historic building, added up-to-date support facililites, and will continue to support the mission of the church far into the future. A linear atrium creates a light filled zone that keeps the apartment building from touching the historic building, lets light into the stained glass windows on the south side of the church, provides needed handicapped access and links all of the disparate parts of church functions into one luminous, spiritually uplifting zone.

Address

Philadelphia, PA
19129

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 9am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 9am - 5:30pm
Thursday 9am - 5:30pm
Friday 9am - 5:30pm
Saturday 9am - 5:30pm
Sunday 9am - 5:30pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when MY Architecture posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to MY Architecture:

Share