Newtown Home Constructed by Architect Paul Rudolph to Hit Market for $5.85M

One of two Pennsylvania homes designed by famous architect Paul Rudolph is set to hit the housing market soon in Newtown for $5.85 million.

A Newtown home designed by famed architect Paul Rudolph will be hitting the market for $5.85 million, writes Ryan Mulligan for the Philadelphia Business Journal

The two-story house, which was one of only two homes Rudolph designed in Pennsylvania, was built for Judge John Fullam and his wife in 1959. The property wasn’t listed as part of Rudolph’s portfolio for decades, but was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2019. 

Along with a tennis court, the house boasts four bedrooms and four bathrooms, spanning 5,226 square feet. 

Rudolph’s final vision for the property was never achieved, leaving the home incomplete until the current owner, Eric Wolff, purchased it in 2014. 

The home consisted of two bays, but the original design intended for there to be three. To complete the house, Wolff contacted Bucks County architect John Wolstenholme to design and construct the addition. 

With walls of windows looking out onto the surrounding woods, exposed stone interiors, and patios on either side, the house offers a private sanctuary in nature. 

“We’re positioning it more like a work of art, and focusing on its architectural significance — the history and the design — and targeting buyers who truly understand what it is,” said real estate agent Maureen Reynolds of Serhant Pennsylvania

Read more about the Newtown home designed by renowned architect Paul Rudolph in the Philadelphia Business Journal.

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