In 1926 Ada and Emil Nolde acquired the then undeveloped terp, which they called Seebüll. With the help of his friend, architect Georg Rieve, Nolde planned Haus Seebüll there according to his own ideas. With its clear, geometric shapes, the flat roof building made of Bockhorn clinker bricks echoes the Bauhaus style. However, the arrangement of the windows and two triangular bay windows with roofs in the shape of haystacks at that time create an idiosyncratic effect. [2] [3] By 1937, a studio house and a picture room as well as a thatched garden house were built as part of the house. The garden was laid out as a cottage garden with dahlias and asters, also according to the ideas of the Noldes.