The Home Remodeling Gallery ships with five scenes.
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The Beach Cabin Scene was designed by Dwight Morejohn.
His company's name is CAPTURING CONCEPTS and Virtus products play an integral role in meeting the needs of his many and varied clients. CAPTURING CONCEPT'S specialty product is full color, full size computer generated animations, fly-bys and walkthroughs recorded onto video tape at 30 fr/sec. for professional, pleasing and effective visualization. To speak with Dwight Morejohn directly, call (916) 758-7022. The mailing address is:
Capturing Concepts
731 North Campus Way
Davis, California 95616
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The Burbs and the Country Club Estate Scenes were designed by Tom Deleeuw.
Mr. Deleuuw uses WalkThrough as a three dimensional sketch tool and to create interactive demos of residential and commercial designs. He can be contacted at the following address:
190 West Canton Street #1
Boston, MA 02116
(617) 523-8584
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The Mountain Home Scene was designed by Aaron Hill.
Mr. Hill uses WalkThrough for Windows to create interactive architectural, facilities planning, and real estate demos. He can be contacted at the following address:
3220 Stream Side Road #32
Raleigh, North Carolina 27613
(919) 847-1741
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The Pope-Leighey Scene was designed by Steve Milligan.
The Pope-Leighey House was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for newswriter
Loren Pope. Wright had built several homes for millionaires; Pope had an income of
$50 a week, and the house was built in 1940 at a cost of $7,500. An early example of
Wright's Usonian architecture, this house incorporates many features which would
become hallmarks of Wright's style; the fluid and intelligent interpenetration of spaces, the marriage of the structure with its setting, and the masterful use of new construction materials and techniques. His attention extended to the furniture (which he either selected or designed), the hardware (he specified piano hinges throughout), even the orientation of screw slots in the board and batten walls (horizontal, to emphasize the horizontal lines of the house).
Mrs. Robert Leighey, the house's second owner, donated it to the National
Trust for Historic Preservation when it was threatened by highway construction. In
1964 it was moved from Falls Church, Virginia, to the property of Woodlawn Plantation
near Mount Vernon, where it rests today on a site similar to that for which Wright
designed it. The National Trust operates it as a museum and it is open to the public.
The Pope-Leighey House was modeled with Virtus Walkthrough for Windows by
Stephen Milligan, president of Graphic Media Systems, a CAD, graphics, and VR
service and consulting bureau.
For more information on the model or the Pope Leighey house, contact: