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Like a Christmas package under the tree, this small Indiana house looks delightful and holds the promise of a happy surprise when you look inside. Its type of classic, rectilinear design is often used for houses of more imposing proportions and cost. Yet the architect, working within the very modest budget at the right, incorporated such uncommon features as 10' ceilings, covered decks on two sides of the house, a hall skylight, custom cabinets, recessed lighting fixtures and large expanses of glass. Modular construction and the careful choice of materials went far to keep the house within its budget. Interestingly, both the architect and the owners ascribe much of its success to "good rapport," which the architect found essential while making his "arduous subtractions." Say the owners: "We worked entirely together from the first plan to the present day."


The living-dining room, a single 27' long sweep, has high ceilings and wood trim that carry out spirit of the neatly paneled exterior walls. Like the lines of the house, the plan is admirably straightforward and efficient. The single hallway serves several purposes: it separates the bedrooms from the living area; it connects the guest bedrooms and bath; and it is wide enough to act as an attractive entrance foyer. While the front of the house, save for the entrance, is windowless, both north and south sides are all glass, relating every principal room to the woodland setting. Doors in each room open to one of the two 4' galleries extending the full length on either side. Framing of glass walls is uniform.




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source: House and Garden Magazine | June 1958

 


The Colonial style house shown here along with the Contemporary and Cape Cod counterparts are the proud products of a quiet revolution in American housing. Each of these houses was designed by an outstanding architect with a view toward satisfying a variety of clients. They reflect custom quality, both in architectural and structural details. Yet it is a happy fact that these three houses, as well as numerous variations of them, can be bought by any American family that yearns for a million dollar look in a home that suits the limits of a modest budget. They are manufactured houses, whose components are engineered and built in the assembly plants of the National Homes Corporation, the nation's largest home-builder.

The three models shown here measure 2,050 square feet, including the two-car garage, and the basic house sells in Lafayette, Indiana, for $22,950. Impressed by both the architectural design and the dollars-and-cents value of these houses, H&G presents here the Colonial "Johnstown" model furnished and decorated for a young family.





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source: House and Garden Magazine | May 1958

 



Although in recent years color has held the center of the stage, the white kitchen is coming back into style but with a difference. If you would like a white kitchen but recall with a shudder the grimly clinical "laboratory kitchens" of the modernistic Twenties and Thirties, take heart. White is a wonderful background if you know how to use it. Because it contains all the shades in the spectrum and is the closest approximation to light, it has an affinity for all colors. Food and accessories become more inviting against white, which sets them off as a mat sets off a painting, and they in turn help to relieve it by reflection. (For instance, an orange ceiling makes a white kitchen seem warm and sunny.) White lends itself to many different effects and enables you to change color schemes at will by a switch of accessories. Designer Valerian S. Rybar combined white in cabinets and equipment with cool blues and hot red-orange tones to make his kitchen, opposite, a decorative setting for informal entertaining. It also is thoroughly practical, for everything is easily cleaned.

White kitchen is enlivened by an ingenious mingling of the cool and warm tones of the spectrum. Blue glass mosaic mural with colorful Italian larder motifs is echoed in striped curtains, orange bulletin board and blue tile floor, with subtle color in the all-over blue and green design on white plastic countertops. In the adjoining pantry, left, a bright blue wall with brass clock carries through the dominant color. Here, fold-away cooking units and a dishwasher provide a supplementary work area. The kitchen cooking center is separated from the dining area (used for after-theatre suppers) by a heat-resistant curved glass screen which blocks noise and cooking odors. The wood-and-marble-topped work cabinet, raised on legs to give lightness to the design, also acts as a buffet for informal parties. Cabinets and sinks by St. Charles. Refrigerator, dishwasher, cooking tops and built-in ovens by Frigidaire. Panelyte countertops by St. Regis. Amtico vinyl tile floor.



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source: House and Garden Magazine | February 1958




Any couple with three pre-school children is confronted with a vexing domestic problem: How, under one roof, does one supervise the children when necessary, let them alone when desirable and still enjoy the luxury of adult activities? The house shown here represents one artful solution. Essentially a simple, one-story rectangle, it is divided into three zones a children's area including three bedrooms and a combined play- room and kitchen center; a living-dining zone; and a master bedroom-study zone. Largely because it is so adeptly planned for family living this house recently won an important American Institute of Architecture award.





Three-zone plan shows how the living-dining room not only serves as central area for family activities but also acts as buffer between adults' and children's zones. Study in parents' area can be used as a guest room. The living room is screened from the entrance by large fireplace, which also defines the entrance hall area. Sliding glass panels at rear of living room open to screened porch. Children's zone, with open kitchen as mother's "control center," has two bedrooms and a bath on one side of playroom. a bedroom and laundry-storage area on the other.











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source: House and Garden Magazine | November 1957

 


Designing a successful house for a growing family calls for a perfect meeting of minds. The architect must understand the family, and the family must understand itself. This house, built for a family with three children ranging from 5 to 12, is the product of such understanding. Placed on a sloping, wooded site, it is a pleasantly informal house whose rustic appearance derives from the use of local boulders for the fireplace and redwood boarding as exterior siding. But it is the T-shaped plan that tells the story of the family. At one side of the main entrance is a children's doorway which leads to a "mud room" and lavatory. From this point the children, now clean and presentable, may go directly to their wing consisting of four bedrooms, bath and a large (15'x21') playroom. Laundry equipment and a countertop separate the playroom and kitchen, thus making it possible to keep an eye on the children while cooking. Well removed from the children's domain are the living room, down six steps from the entrance level, and the master bedroom, study and guest room, up six steps from the entrance level.







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source: House and Garden Magazine | November 1957

 



Peering over the landscaped knoll shown above, the passerby has no doubt about the inspiration of the house just beyond. The slope of its shingle roof is classic Japanese. The site itself, only 100' wide by 130' deep, is plotted in the Japanese manner, with cleverly conceived gardens and terraces adjacent to all principal rooms. In the same mood, too, are the sliding screens, the varied textures, the waxed wood finishes and the finely wrought architectural details. Yet, for all its Oriental spirit, this California house is really contemporary U.S.A. The plan skillfully separates living and sleeping areas, and decorative screens and walls shut out the surrounding neighborhood. With only five main rooms the house seems spacious. Every foot of the small site is put to good use. Today's living demands such intensive planning,

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