The Westdale Village Courtyard Apartments will not be on the agenda of the
Tuesday, October 25 PLUM meeting.
We are now told it could be
November 1, 8 or 15. Stay tuned and we will let you know.
For all those who can attend the meeting at City Hall, we still are
organizing carpools and free parking for those cars going downtown. Contact Ken
Marsh at ken.marsh@verizon.net
or call 310-966-9054.
The press is beginning to cover our issue, and related stories on
preservation and ranch-style housing have begun to appear. Yesterday's L.A.
Times Home section is a good example.
It is included below.
Thank you for your continuing support. Our case strengthens everyday.
http://www.latimes.com/features/home/la-hm-ranch20oct20,1,1206164.story?coll=la-headlines-home
L.A.'S
ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE | FOURTH IN A SERIES
The
once and future ranch
The
postwar icon is wooing a new generation. Yes, your folks' house is cool again.
By Scott Timberg
Times Staff Writer
October 20, 2005
ITS low-slung frame sprawled across plains and valleys of a more open
landscape. The single-story footprint didn't boast, or point skyward like the
self-assured colonial or Victorian. It offered a comfortable relationship with
the climate and surrounding flora, and a democratic, open floor plan; it didn't
section off areas into servants quarters or announce visitors in grand foyers.
It was modern without being Space Age, modest without being plain, evoking
history without being mere nostalgia.
If a style of residential architecture can symbolize an era, the ranch house
became the iconic American home in the period from roughly 1945 to 1970: By
some estimates, 70% of American homes built in the 25 years after World War II
were ranch houses.
The
Chicago area, where the rancher
evolved out of Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie house, and the desert Southwest,
where the working ranch provided inspiration,
were
important centers.
But the ranch house had a special role in
Los Angeles,
and the fruit orchards and bean fields that fell away from the city soon became
ideal laboratories for the style — making
L.A.
the unofficial capital of what would be called the "California-style
house."
Postwar
Los Angeles, with its
forward-looking community of architects and developers, took the ranch to its
apogee, and
Hollywood, with its
powerful image-making ability, helped spread the word. Now, because of its
deep-rooted connections, the
Los Angeles
area is reasserting its role in the style's revival.
To author and suburban bard D.J. Waldie, the ranch house is downright
fashionable. "It's the late 20th century version of the Arts and Crafts
bungalow," he says. "Some of that fussiness is being transferred to
ranch house culture."
Alongside the fussiness is a growing preservationist movement. "The ranch
house is the next emerging residential preservation issue," says Ken Bernstein,
director of preservation issues for the Los Angeles Conservancy. "And
while some have come to accept the high-end Modernist home, the ranch house is
only now gaining recognition and acceptance." In 2002, the conservancy
fought to save a Cliff May Experimental House in
Sullivan
Canyon. And the chair of the
group's Modern Committee, Adriene Biondo, lives in a Joseph Eichler ranch
house.
There is "typically a 40- or 50-year lag between the time when something
is popular and when it's rediscovered," says Kenneth Breisch, professor of
architecture and preservation at
USC.
"My students, who look back nostalgically at the ranch house because it's
from another era, are doing projects and research papers on the ranch
house," he says.
Jim Brown, a
South Pasadena
photographer, and his wife, Michelle Gringeri-Brown, both grew up in postwar
ranches in the Southland in the '50s and '60s. "And like everyone else, we
took them for granted," Brown says. "We moved on and embraced
bungalows. Ranches were so ubiquitous. And because it was the house that a lot
of boomers had grown up in, it was
my
folks' house. And what could be
more uncool than your folks' house?"
But the experience of the Browns, who came to value the ranch's low-key beauty
and its indoor-outdoor living, shows the style's reformation.
Brown and Gringeri-Brown, a former
editor of American Bungalow, now publish the year-old magazine Atomic Ranch,
which aims to do for the rancher what Taschen Books' 2002 release did for the
Case Study Houses: frame the style in a hip, retro package, nearly fetishizing
its sharp angles, post and beam ceilings, and sliding glass doors.
"The people we photograph are in their 30s and 40s," says Brown, a
good-humored and enthusiastic guy in his early 50s. "They have hip, cool professions;
they're animators or musicians." He calls the process in which people
reject their parent's era but embrace the previous generation "the grandma
effect."
THE ranch house, because of the era in which it developed, had its meaning made
largely by the mass media. It was one of the first all-American architectural
forms and, arguably, the first form that developed alongside its own mirror
image.
The ranch's origins are tied up with larger trends in popular culture. Around
1930 — about the same time early ranch houses went up in the
Palos
Verdes Peninsula
and
Palm Springs — the
country became increasingly conscious of its history and vernacular traditions,
especially its Western heritage. Movies by John Ford showed lanky cowboys
retiring to their ranches after a day riding the range, Bob Wills and His Texas
Playboys had begun to record, and even composer Aaron Copland became fascinated
with Billie the Kid.
Some scholars argue that the survival of the ranch house depended on elements
of Western pop culture such as dude ranches, Western swing music and
Hollywood
films. "If it had not been for their new role, and their glorification in
the movies, ranches might well have disappeared from the landscape,"
architectural historian Alan Hess writes in his book "Rancho Deluxe,"
which looks at the ranch-style homes of Buffalo Bill, Will Rogers and Gene
Autry, whose publicity helped whet the nation's appetite.
"Had that technology not existed, the ranch house would most probably have
gone the way of log cabins and sod huts," Hess writes, "a colorful
historical memory but no longer a living architecture."
The technology of film, and the nation's patriotic tone during and after the
war, filled the humble tract ranch with positive connotations. "In the
'50s, say 'ranch' and it would bring up all these associations," says
Hess. "Self-reliance, owning your own property, living in nature. And the
people who lived in them were often pioneers in the development of the suburbs.
Good architects caught all that and translated it into design."
But even as they were being built all over the country, and appearing in
countless publicity photographs and magazine covers shot in
Southern
California, ranchers were not as visible on television as the
multi-story colonials that housed many sitcom families. Mr. Ed and his owner
lived in one, with stable attached, as did the family in "Green
Acres" and other rural shows; Lucy and Ricky Ricardo briefly lived in a
ranch house during a sojourn to the wilds of
Connecticut.
In the '60s, Dick Van Dyke's TV-writer character lived in a
New
Rochelle, N.Y., rancher, with
his wife, played by Mary Tyler Moore (who currently lives in a
San
Fernando Valley rancher). But they were hardly ubiquitous.
"On TV, most of the houses went
up,
just as they did in reality," says Mark Bennett, an
L.A.
artist whose work concerns the floor plans of sitcom houses. He laments that
the sitcom that celebrated 1950s
Southern California
— "Happy Days" — wasn't set in a ranch house. "There
were several great shows that had incredible ranch houses, but they didn't last
more than a season or so," he says.
The ranch's use in films, outside the Western genre, was often for parodic or
sardonic purposes: By 1962, the ranch house played a starring role in
"Bachelor in
Paradise," in which Bob Hope, as
a rich Francophile playboy, is exiled to a squeaky clean Valley ranch tract
because of unpaid taxes. After condescension early in the film —
"What do you call this style? Early
Disneyland?"
— Hope's character comes to embrace the community and its suburban mores.
"Back to the Future" (1985), shows how flexible the ranch can be. At
the film's beginning, the family ranch house is dingy and unimpressive, housing
a clan of underachievers. "We wanted [Crispin Glover's] George McFly to be
a kind of working stiff, with a family that lives rather modestly," says
Lawrence Paull, the film's production designer. When Michael J. Fox's character
goes back to his hometown in 1955, the ranch development he grew up in is just
being built.
By the end of the film, due to the meddling of Fox's character, the family has
become vastly more successful — and their rancher dressed up quite
nicely. "It's the American dream," Paull says. "The house became
a symbol of that."
The ranch house takes on a strikingly ambivalent role in "Boogie
Nights" (1997): It's the setting, briefly seen, for the Mark Wahlberg
character's middle-class
Torrance
family, and it's the bacchanalian abode of Burt Reynolds' millionaire porn
director.
The parody was gentler in last year's Pixar animated film "The
Incredibles," but the Eichler-like ranch house still symbolizes the
suburban conformity to which this superhero family has been confined.
BESIDES all the cultural baggage, the ranch house boomed in
Southern
California partly because the region was a hotbed of talent
— and talent with an adventurous streak — in midcentury.
"This was the mother lode of experimentation in architecture, especially
in residential architecture," says John English, an architectural
preservationist. "Here is where the boundaries were being pushed, and
here's where they got to things first."
On a clear summer afternoon, Hess, the architectural historian, is witnessing
evidence of that talent. He's in
Panorama
City, driving through a postwar
ranch tract, full of L-shaped houses with low-pitched roofs and visible
garages, that he finds "stirring." The individualism of each home is
subtle: a hint of brick, a dove house,
board-and-batten
siding, wood porch posts. (By the end of the afternoon in the Valley, he'll
have seen ranches with hints of New Mexican, gingerbread and Japanese styles.)
Los Angeles, he points out, was a
national force in marketing and advertising. "People outside
Southern
California saw these things as not quite respectable, because they
were about popularization and the mass audience," Hess says. "But
that's what
Southern California is all about."
Hess' 2005 book, simply titled "The Ranch House," locates the rancher
in the history of architectural Modernism, calling it "a moderate modernism"
without the austerity of the European vanguard or the sharp edges of the Case
Study Houses.
"In
Europe they were trying to create decent
affordable housing," he says of the often utopian attempts by Modernists
Le Corbusier or Water Gropius. "In
America,
they were trying to sell it. Architects and developers realized Americans
wanted individuality, and they found a way to mass-produce individuality."
Besides the architects, he emphasizes developers such as Henry J. Kaiser.
"Living in a ranch house," says author Waldie, "would have
connoted
an ambivalence about Modernism: On one hand
you've purchased a home that is on the cutting edge of domestic architecture of
the period," stocked with all the modern conveniences. "But the house
also comes with associations of American values, and a suggestion that the best
way to live is on the open landscape of
America."
Every ranch enthusiast has a favorite architect or designer. Some go for the
upscale Modernist Eichler, others for the rustic-elegant William
Wurster, still others for overlooked figures like the
contemporary-style Edward
Fickett.
But all acknowledge that the genius of mass-produced individualism was May, a
San
Diego big-band leader and furniture designer who never
got an architectural degree but lifted the rancher to great expression.
Waldie says of the often anxiety-ridden search for affordable housing,
"Cliff May took the angst out."
May, a sixth-generation Californian, produced about 20,000
houses, many of them in the Southland but ranging as far as Italy
and Australia. His custom homes were the higher end of the style, with
exposed wood-beam ceilings, ranch-style gates and lots of hand-carved wood, but
he's also known for tract developments that brought smaller ranchers —
about 950 square feet — into range for blue-collar workers.
A few years after building his first house in San Diego in 1931, May moved to
Los Angeles because of the wealth of clients — and because the city's
status as a media center gave him a bullhorn.
Much of May's influence came from designing houses like his
ranchos, homes in
Pomona
and
Anaheim and
Long
Beach, which were closer to Spanish-colonial cattle
ranches than the more clean-lined style that would develop later. May was, like
"Ramona" author Helen Hunt Jackson, a genius at packaging
California
history. "The early Californians had the right idea," May said in a
1936 interview. "They built for the seclusion and comfort of their
families, for the enjoyment of relaxation in their homes. We want to perpetuate
those ideas of home building."
Over time, some of the historical roots dropped out of his designs as he
embraced the sleeker profile of Modernism, as in his
Eshelman-Bemis
house, a 1963 Rolling Hills rancher with a sweeping roof, an entire wall made
of glass and an open interior that frames views of the
Pacific Ocean.
THOUGH the ranch house's roots go as far back as the working cattle ranch of
the 19th century, even to the Mexican adobe haciendas built at the beginning of
Spanish colonialism, they don't all have wagon wheels and cactus gardens. The
style ranges from deliberately Western — like some of May's custom
designs — to structures whose simple and clean lines, extensive glass and
rejection of ornament are positively modern. Between these and the suburban
developments, which can often be merely generic, the rancher is a difficult
style to characterize.
Generally, the ranch's internal spaces flowed into one another in an
unstructured way.
USC's Breisch says they fit the informal tone of post-World
War II living.
"It seems to have pivoted on the labor of housewives," Waldie says of
the open plan. "It only works if the housewife is standing in the kitchen
and can survey her realm from the command center."
The rancher was one of the first middle-class homes to have a separate master
bedroom for the parents. "The family room on the other hand brought
everyone together for hobbies, cooking, TV and homework," says Hess.
"The architecture threw family members together by design, but also gave
them some needed privacy.
Pretty ingenious."
And the home's L or U shape, typically bent around a backyard with
kidney-shaped pool and barbecue, encouraged relaxed family togetherness and
reflected then-progressive ideas about healthy family life.
Whatever security or prosperity was found inside a ranch house, though, it had
little to say to public spaces like streets or parks. "It literally turned
its back on the street," says Waldie. "It implied that life was lived
only in private. That's the most pernicious effect of the ranch house
ethos."
Most revolutions fade out, or wear out their welcome, and the ranch fell on
hard times as the 1970s began. The rising cost of land, Hess explains, made
these rambling homes more expensive, and the energy crisis made it pricey to
heat a sprawling one-story with large glass windows. Ranchers were built less
and less, and some owners began knocking them down to build flashier homes.
"There wasn't much street presence to a ranch house," says Louis
Wasserman, the author, with M.
Caren Connolly, of the
recent book "Updating Classic
America:
Ranches." "People started to convert their ranches into Tudors. They
wanted street presence, and the ranch was anti-street presence."
Part of it too was as subject to fashion as changing hemlines: The ranch house
was not only a midcentury
style, it was also a style
that had become positively ubiquitous.
The backlash against ranchers continues in some parts of the
country,
where they're being ripped down to make room for
McMansions
and pseudo-Tuscans. It's a contrast to the days when fabulously rich and famous
Southlanders such as John Paul Getty and Will Rogers enjoyed the informal
living and egalitarian symbolism of the rancher.
When Elvis Presley made his first fortune in the 1950s, as scholar
Karal Ann Marling points out in her cultural history
"As Seen on TV," he bought three
Cadillacs
for himself — and a ranch house in suburban Memphis for his mother.
Ronald Reagan, as an actor and later as president, lived in a series of ranch
houses as well as, famously, one working ranch.
Hollywood
figures such as Robert Wagner,
Cybill Shepherd and
Dick Clark live in ranchers.
Once dismissed as a conformist suburban artifact like white bread and
kidney-shaped pools, the ranch house has become the kind of house that attracts
cultists, preservationists and scholarly attention. "And what happens to
taste in
Los Angeles influences
what people do elsewhere in the country," says Hess.
In fact, Atomic Ranch publisher Brown says he and his wife would move out of
their 1920s Craftsman in a second if they could find a Cliff May
rancho they could afford. These days they
are, apparently, not alone.