Anyone Can Now Buy an Eames House—Sort Of

A new kit of officially produced parts lets you build structures in the style of Ray and Charles Eames starting at $325 a square foot.

Two-story Eames Pavilion, 2026.

Case Study Home No. 8, the 1949 Pacific Palisades home of designers Ray and Charles Eames, emerged from brainstorms around adaptability and industrial design, with a name as bland as the term "manufactured parts" suggests. The couple’s first vision for the hilly lot, purchased from Arts & Architecture magazine owner John Entenza, was a dramatic, cantilevering glass-and-steel, Eero Saarinen design. But it would get shelved in part due to postwar material shortages. Its replacement, erected via a series of grid-like, deceptively simple steel-framed panels, has since become a world-renowned museum and midcentury mecca.

But this singularity, a physical shrine to the couple’s vision, is better considered a system, a model that the couple would famously revisit and rework throughout their lifetime. (The couple did design a modular home for production, though one was never built.) "For them, architecture was not limited to the buildings you make," says Eames Demetrios, grandson of the couple and current director of the Eames Office. "It includes the systems you make to make things happen."

Now, Ray and Charles’s prefab visions can be the basis for your own project. In partnership with Barcelona-based manufacturer Kettal, the Eames Office has developed the Eames Pavilion System, a modular building kit of parts with a wide range of proposed uses, including a recording studio, backyard office, your own Case Study cabana, or, with some retrofitting, a "fully equipped two-story house." Made of aluminum structural modules, the system, which starts at around $325 a square foot, includes interchangeable roof types, windows, textiles, and other accessories that reference those of the iconic Pacific Palisades property and other Eames residential projects.

Announcement of the plans for Case Study Houses Nos. 8 and 9 in Arts & Architecture, December 1945 (left); An early 1950s photograph of the Eames House, initially intended for the film House: After Five Years of Living (right).

Announcement of the plans for Case Study Houses Nos. 8 and 9 in Arts & Architecture, December 1945 (left); An early 1950s photograph of the Eames House, initially intended for the film House: After Five Years of Living (right).

© Eames Office, LLC. All rights reserved.

Charles and Ray in the Eames House living room, 1958.

Charles and Ray in the Eames House living room, 1958.

© Eames Office, LLC. All rights reserved.

Ray’s paper collages explore compositions of materials, colors, and graphic patterns of the Eames House, 1948 (left); Concept study of possible pavilion sizes and typologies, 2024 (right).

Ray’s paper collages explore compositions of materials, colors, and graphic patterns of the Eames House, 1948 (left); Concept study of possible pavilion sizes and typologies, 2024 (right).

© Eames Office, LLC. All rights reserved.

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