{"id":15773,"date":"2016-01-10T09:33:11","date_gmt":"2016-01-10T14:33:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/awesomejelly.com\/?p=15773"},"modified":"2016-01-10T09:33:11","modified_gmt":"2016-01-10T14:33:11","slug":"travel-back-to-the-1960s-in-a-most-unusual-round-house","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/awesomejelly.com\/travel-back-to-the-1960s-in-a-most-unusual-round-house\/","title":{"rendered":"Travel Back to the 1960s In A Most Unusual Round House"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"jelly1\"<\/p>\n

Now this is cool…<\/p>\n

Under its zigzag roofline, nearly every vertical surface in this 1967 house curves to form a circle. The windows curve. The paneled hallways curve. The front doors (there are two) curve. \u201cWhen you close a door, you see a continuous round wall,\u201d says Julian Goldklang, who with his wife, Desiree, have turned the house \u2014 and to a degree themselves \u2014 into an ode to midcentury design. \u201cMost people don\u2019t get their dream home to be their first home,\u201d Julian says. \u201cI really feel lucky to live here.\u201d<\/p>\n