The Eames House & Foundation

The Eames Foundation is a non-profit established in 2004 to preserve and protect the Eames House and provide educational experiences that celebrate the creative legacy of Charles and Ray Eames.

Flower pots along a sidewalk of windows to a house with an Eames chair inside

The Eames House

The Eames House, or Case Study House #8, was designed by Charles and Ray Eames to serve as their primary residence and secondary work studio. The house’s initial design, the “Bridge House,” was introduced alongside seven other Case Study Program homes in the January 1945 issue of Arts & Architecture magazine. After material shortages and a heavy reconfiguration of the plan, the Eameses constructed their double-story, two-structure home in 1949. 

The house is a living laboratory of the Eameses’ ideas and creativity, illuminating their approaches to life and work in a multi-layered, visceral manner. The Eameses nestled this iconic piece of architecture in an idyllic setting overlooking the Pacific Ocean just north of Santa Monica, sided by an expansive meadow of eucalyptus trees. Its materials, interior collections, and landscaping are maintained as they were during Charles and Ray’s lifetimes; all three elements tell the story of the couple’s life and work.

The house and its 1.4-acre site were formally declared a National Historic Landmark on the day that would have been Charles’s 100th birthday: June 17th, 2007. 

“We began by trying to gain an understanding of family behavior and a vocabulary of materials and techniques, correlated through a logical approach to economics and adapted to an industrialized system of mass production. We agreed that the House must make no insistent demands for itself, but rather aid as a background for life in work.”

Charles Eames

The Foundation

The Eames Office acted as a founding partner of the Eames Foundation alongside Vitra and Herman Miller, the two furniture companies that have held a lasting relationship with Charles and Ray’s furniture since the 1940s. Additionally, the Eames Foundation’s partnership with the Getty Conservation Institute is helping secure the physicality of the house and its collections through special ongoing conservation projects. The Eames House is considered one of the most influential post-World War II residences in the world—one in which we hope will continue to inspire architects, designers, and an array of people across the globe.

“I really felt that the house is the keystone…I hope it will be like the center of the sun radiating out, enticing people who are interested in new ways of communicating.”

Lucia Eames, daughter of Charles Eames


Click here to schedule your Eames House visit.