The house is still the predominant taste of his time in a simple and practical style with references to the architecture of residences of the early nineteenth century.
As for the architecture of the garden, Mies addressed the news-driven Muthesius understand these as an "architecture for outdoor spaces." The land is divided into an upper garden with various spaces located in symmetrical fashion and a landscaped garden, something larger at the bottom.
A huge wall of containment creates a higher level for the gardens and at the same time, forms a platform on which the house seems to rest, and accentuating the contrast between the gardens lined up at the top and the vegetation of the slope of the bottom.