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Although the Florida development house shown here measures only 1,580 square feet, it bears many architectural refinements found in the designer's expensive custom-built houses. It looks far larger than its actual size because the plan integrates a 36' x 36' screened patio and a carport.

In the shape of a modified T, the house consists of one wing 76 feet long-study, living-dining room, kitchen, carport and storage wall-and another with two bedrooms and baths. The main entrance is centrally located between the two wings, and a minimum of space is lost on hallways. The closets form sound mufflers around kitchen and baths where mechanical equipment is installed. Kitchen, near the entrance, is only a few steps from both the dining area and the screened patio, which is accessible from both wings by generous window walls. Post and beam construction enabled the designer to expand interior spaces with partial walls. The plan is based on a system of 12' x 18' modular units which can be rearranged to produce varied designs for houses of smaller or larger size.








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source: House and Garden Magazine | May 1957

 


What the creative eye can see in unlikely material is illustrated in these views of designer-importer Lowell Groves' remodeled top floor apartment in a narrow old two-story house on San Francisco's Telegraph Hill. Until architect Roy Starbird and Mr. Groves went to work on it, the upper floor was a cramped railroad-type flat walled off from the Hill's matchless view. Now front walls of glass and a deck open it to San Francisco's hills and bay. The restrained decorating treatment of stark white walls and dark bare floors composes the most effective setting for the owner's fine collection of antique Dutch East Indian furniture and Far East art objects.

Of interest in the decorating scheme are the vertically striped blinds in navy and white to draw over the window walls at night, an accent of color in the simple living-dining room. Though the apartment is small, adroit use of niches and corridor and kitchen walls for storage contributes to the illusion of space. An uninterrupted view through the living area from the deck emphasizes both the dramatic qualities of the possessions Mr. Groves has collected and the serenity of the setting.



The interior walls are painted white, against which the dark woods and brass trim of the furniture stand out in sharp relief. The cool effect is reminiscent of colonial houses in India. Textured beige silk covers the sofa and natural linen is used on the chairs. The 18th century highboy was made in Ceylon by the Dutch and based on English designs of the period of William and Mary, modified with native Indian brass work. The dining table, a family heirloom, was once a sewing table. It is in perfect scale with the Regency chairs upholstered in navy blue tweed. Rickshaw lamps flank the 19th century Chinese oil painting of Park Street, Calcutta.





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source: House and Garden Magazine | November 1956

 


For those who like traditional atmosphere without too much formality, a simplified, one-story house of American Colonial styling is just about right. This pleasant small home in Kenilworth, Illinois, is a good example. The owners, whose children are grown, wanted a compact house with few but relatively large rooms. They also wanted graceful details and a picturesque quality. On both counts, this U-shaped house is an unqualified success. The exterior is brick, painted a clear, sunny yellow, with gray shutters and white trim. The front door is recessed and centered between two bay windows. Inside, the study is to the left of the entrance hall, the dining room to the right. The living room, at the rear, faces a small garden. Off the master bedroom is a sitting room that doubles as a nursery for two young grandchildren who come to visit on occasional weekends and holidays. The kitchen, perhaps the most-used room in the house, has a barbecue fireplace in one corner. In the winter months, it is a friendly place for breakfast, lunch and Sunday night suppers. Throughout, the house has fine architectural details, and makes a back- ground in character with the antique furniture. It suits the owners far better than their former large house, for it combines traditional charm with modern housekeeping efficiency.






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source: House and Garden Magazine | December 1956

 


Ingenuity can often substitute for money in today's kitchen planning. An unconventional design carried out in budget-priced materials produced this kitchen, a self-contained cooking and serving citadel that is the hub of a big modern living room. Structurally, this is a straightforward carpentry job that could be duplicated in other materials, either expensive or inexpensive. The walls are ash plywood attached to wood studding and the cabinets are birch plywood. Walls and cabinets were given a satin finish: a coat of 50 per cent white lead and 50 per cent turpentine rubbed down after 24 hours with a rag dipped in linseed oil. The circular countertop was custom-cut from a sheet of Formica. Vinyl tile covers the floor.






 The equipment is arranged so that the large pieces, refrigerator and wall oven, are at the flattened ends of the arc and the smaller appliances are fitted into the more confined space in between (a point to allow for when planning a circular kitchen). This floor plan saves on materials and makes it easier to prepare meals and serve them indoors or on the terrace (reached by a door opposite the open end of the kitchen). Two ceiling spotlights and strip lights over work surfaces illuminate the kitchen. Flame was chosen as an interior color because it goes well with soft wood tones and provides a surprise element of stimulating color when the pass-throughs are opened for meals.


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source: House and Garden Magazine | September 1956

 


The new General Motors Techni- cal Center, which was formally dedicated this spring, is the workshop of GM's research scientists, engineers and artists. But it is much more. The Center's 25 buildings, stretched over a 330-acre site near Detroit, reflect the architectural genius and technical resourcefulness of a small army of planners. When in the six years of construction a new building technique with old materials was needed, it was devised; when a new design seemed nec- essary, it was created; and when a new material was needed, it was fashioned. The direct beneficiary, of course, is GM. But in years to come, the fresh concepts of design and color will find expression in houses across the United States.







Like a family building a new house, GM faced the problem of planning with one eye to-ward the future when natural growth and changing interests would impose new demands on the Technical Center. The solution-movable interior walls and construction with modular units -is as adaptable to a house as it was to the Center. The architects, Eero Saarinen and Associates, established a standard measurement unit-a five- foot module-for all basic building components. The lighting, heating, ventilating, storage, wall and door units all are modular. Partitions can be moved overnight, and exterior wall sections can be replaced with others, either glass or solid, in minutes. What this versatility promises for tomorrow's homes is provocative. The five major buildings, in general form, are variations of the same rectilinear design, but each has its own character. And in every building, from the power plant to the styling studio, the use of color and lighting is distinctive.

Again and again, the Technical Center confirms a vital architectural point: good contemporary design may be put to many uses. Indeed, a number of American archi- tects, including some who helped plan the Center itself, have already incorpo- rated features of the project in houses they have recently designed. In addition to the handsome adaptations shown in these sketches, the Center offers many practical details that may be followed in even the smallest of houses. Through- out the entire project, there is no super- fluous molding or trim. Basic building materials are changed only when there is a perceptible change in the plane of walls. To make floor space seem larger and cleaner, synthetic tile blocks were laid with the pattern running continu- ously from block to block, instead of in the usual checkerboard manner. Heating and cooling systems use the same ducts. All hardware is made of the same metal. These and many other details reflect the infinite planning essential in building a Technical Center- or a fine house.

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source: House and Garden Magazine | June 1956

 


When people say they like a "functional" house, they most often mean a house engineered simply to give them a complex of labor-saving devices and special conveniences. This, of course, is just one concept of the functional house. Another architectural definition of function is expressed in the small house. that appears here and on the cover of this issue. Its "functional" virtue, to both the archi- tect and owner, is its complete simplicity. Yet with its repeated pattern of circular stonework, it is in addition aesthetically satisfying. It is essentially one big living space, 45' by 20', broken only by a free-standing circular fireplace and a larger circular stone wall, half of which encloses the kitchen and bath. The other half, outside the house, forms an outdoor shower and sun-bathing area. Built on a 24-acre site in Massachusetts' Berkshires, the house overlooks a lake and, in the dis- tance, the grounds of the famous Tanglewood Music Festival. A low stone wall encompassing the house carries out the circular theme and defines front and rear terraces. The long side walls, broken by seven doors, are entirely of glass. The walls at either end, each providing 20' of storage space, are solid. Though the in- terior, except for kitchen and bath, is a single area without partitions, it divides naturally for three uses. There is the living area at one end, centering on the fireplace; the dining area in the middle of the house, opposite the kitchen; and finally, in the remaining third, the sleeping area. The last may be separated from the rest of the house and transformed into two bedrooms by folding partitions. Under the sleeping area are a garage and utility room, accessible from the kitchen by a circular stairway. Devoid of dirt-catching cubbyholes and niches, this year-round house is a model of functionalism in one basic sense; upkeep is largely a matter of dusting the floors once a week.




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source: House and Garden Magazine | May 1956

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