“In these buildings – with a stepped-back ‘hillside-village’ form and ever-changing rooflines within a simple construction discipline – Rudolph has given both low-and high –rise the same, very residential scale. ‘It’s my hope that these units will seem like houses in the sky, not drawers in a cabinet.’ Another advantage of these innovative forms is the creation of major private outdoor living spaces for almost every unit. And they are real terraces – not balconies, which Rudolph calls ‘useless.'”
“House in the Sky” – with Terrace – under 221-D-3. Architectural Record 143 (June 1968): 160.