[Image: Douglas Darden, the Oxygen House; courtesy of the Darden Estate, via Part].
[Images: Douglas Darden, the Oxygen House; courtesy of the Darden Estate, via Part].In an otherwise almost unreadable
essay, we learn that Darden, "a young and very talented architect, designed the house for Burnden Abraham, a disabled signalman for the Southern Pacific railroad, on a site near Frenchman's Bend in rural northern Mississippi. The drawings were completed in 1998. Abraham died shortly after the footings for the house were poured. The construction of the house was abandoned."
[Images: Douglas Darden, the Oxygen House; courtesy of the Darden Estate, via Part].Intriguingly, the client was actually "confined to an oxygen tent because of disabling chest injuries":
Those injuries were caused by the derailment of a Southern Pacific train on precisely the spot that was later intended as the site for his house. The house he wanted was to be his oxygen house: a shelter and setting that would sustain and support his life. It was to be, quite literally, the place that "held" his breath and gave him life.
Had the client lived to see the construction of his house, ironically he intended to die in it; the structure would then have been "transformed into his sepulcher and his tomb."
[Images: Douglas Darden, the Oxygen House; courtesy of the Darden Estate, via Part].
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