When Rob and Mary Lubera started pulling threads to uncover the origins of their new home—the lone midcentury house amid rows of Tudor Revivals in suburban Detroit—not even architecture scholars could have anticipated what they would find. Theirs is the last surviving residence by Alexander Girard (1907–1993), a modernist visionary who made his name in textiles but tried his hand at virtually everything, architecture included. The shoji-like laminate screens, seen  in the entryway, are characteristic of his Japanese-influenced work.  Search “노래방아가씨구해요 【카톡style0907】 여우아가씨구해요 나머지 유흥아가씨구인 룸아가씨구인 빠아가씨구합니다 카페아가씨하는곳 여성아가씨하는곳 노래방아가씨하는곳” from This Michigan Couple Found Out They Own the Last Standing Home by Alexander Girard

Search “노래방아가씨구해요 【카톡style0907】 여우아가씨구해요 나머지 유흥아가씨구인 룸아가씨구인 빠아가씨구합니다 카페아가씨하는곳 여성아가씨하는곳 노래방아가씨하는곳”

When Rob and Mary Lubera started pulling threads to uncover the origins of their new home—the lone midcentury house amid rows of Tudor Revivals in suburban Detroit—not even architecture scholars could have anticipated what they would find. Theirs is the last surviving residence by Alexander Girard (1907–1993), a modernist visionary who made his name in textiles but tried his hand at virtually everything, architecture included. The shoji-like laminate screens, seen in the entryway, are characteristic of his Japanese-influenced work.