One House Per Day No. 401 was inspired by House No. 167. It's a nine-square matrix of rooms with a private greenhouse on top. Get your green thumb on.
 One House Per Day No. 402 is all wet. It's a sixteen-square matrix of rooms with an accessible rooftop designed for swimming, soaking, rainwater harvesting, and bird bathing. Like House No. 74, it also has an impluvium. For the history buffs.
 One House Per Day No. 403 is a modified sixteen-square matrix of rooms with a freeform courtyard and a hilly landscape on top.
 One House Per Day No. 404 is a thirty-six-square matrix of rooms. Twenty are private, including a four-square central courtyard, but the remaining sixteen generously open outward, to be shared with the neighbors. Anything can happen in those rooms.
 One House Per Day No. 405 has a dovecote on top. A riff on the plan of House No. 122, the cylindrical drum of the dovecote interrupts the four-square organization with vertical and horizontal circulation. This house is for the birds.
 One House Per Day No. 406 is a variation of House No. 328 with a large commercial greenhouse on top. A different kind of live-work space. The public can access the greenhouse through the large courtyard, while entry to the house is through the small
 One House Per Day No. 407 is a massive greenhouse with a house inside it. Four distinct clerestory-lit dwelling spaces interrupt the regular rhythm of the growing space and protrude through the repetitive shed roofs. Inspired by House No. 364 and th
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