Mid-Century Modern Archives - Restore Oregon https://restoreoregon.org/category/mid-century-modern/ Saving Historic Places Fri, 10 Nov 2023 04:35:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://restoreoregon.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-Untitled-design-32x32.png Mid-Century Modern Archives - Restore Oregon https://restoreoregon.org/category/mid-century-modern/ 32 32 OREGON MADE, Second Edition Now Available https://restoreoregon.org/2023/06/12/oregon-made-second-edition-now-available/ Mon, 12 Jun 2023 19:23:38 +0000 https://restoreoregon.org/?p=59436

Oregon Made: A Tour of Regional Mid-Century Modern Architecture Second Edition Now Available on Amazon Pre-Sale! We are beyond thrilled to announce that Oregon Made, Second Edition is now available on Amazon. Help Restore Oregon ensure our book is inventoried after our pre-sale event by going to the Amazon Oregon Made page, adding it to […]

The post OREGON MADE, Second Edition Now Available appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>

Oregon Made: A Tour of
Regional Mid-Century Modern Architecture

Second Edition Now Available on Amazon Pre-Sale!

We are beyond thrilled to announce that
Oregon Made, Second Edition is now available on Amazon.

Help Restore Oregon ensure our book is inventoried after our pre-sale event by going to the Amazon Oregon Made page, adding it to your wish list, or even better placing an actual order!

Explore the Pacific Northwest’s finest mid-century modern architecture with Oregon Made. 

Whether you are the steward of a mid-century modern home or simply appreciate the thoughtful design aesthetic of the mid-century era, Oregon Made will inspire a deeper understanding of Pacific Northwest Modernism by introducing you to the architects behind the movement and the principles that guided their work.

What's New in the Second Edition?

This fully-updated edition features an additional 10 new MCM homes, over two dozen new photographs of these striking mid-century homes, including works by noted Pacific Northwest architects Richard Campbell and Joachim Grube, and the homes featured in the 2023 Rummer home tour.

Building on our MCM work, in 2023 Restore Oregon launched a year full of mid-century modern educational experiences through Restore Oregon Modernism, highly curated architecture, and design events to inspire Oregonians to preserve, reuse, and pass forward mid-century modern gems year-round.

Check out this happy reader! Pictured above is our first, Oregon Made, Second Edition customer at Mr. Rummer's Neighborhood Home Tour in May.

With the publication of Oregon Made, Restore Oregon assembled more than a decade of home tour highlights all in one place, including in-depth descriptions of more than twenty homes designed by renowned architects such as Pietro Belluschi, John Yeon, Van Evera Bailey, Saul Zaik, John Storrs and more!

Oregon Made, the Perfect Gift!

Chock full of interior and exterior photos (both period and contemporary), insightful commentary about this beloved regional architectural style, and a forward by Anthony and Marti Belluschi, this book was conceived as the ideal primer for anyone eager to learn how a worldwide design movement was adapted to function in harmony with the unique climate, landscape and indigenous materials of the Pacific Northwest.

The post OREGON MADE, Second Edition Now Available appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
A Rummer Wrap Up https://restoreoregon.org/2023/06/06/a-rummer-wrap-up/ Tue, 06 Jun 2023 22:19:01 +0000 https://restoreoregon.org/?p=58550

Photos by Carey Cramer Mr. Rummer’s Neighborhood: A Mid-Century Modern Block Party Restore Oregon and its Modernism Committee were thrilled to bring back our big, in-person mid-century modern tour to the Bohmann Park neighborhood this year! Tour guests strolled through four Robert Rummer built homes, even the home he designed for his family. We saw […]

The post A Rummer Wrap Up appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>

Photos by Carey Cramer

Mr. Rummer’s Neighborhood:
A Mid-Century Modern Block Party

Restore Oregon and its Modernism Committee were thrilled to bring back our big, in-person mid-century modern tour to the Bohmann Park neighborhood this year! Tour guests strolled through four Robert Rummer built homes, even the home he designed for his family. We saw many smiling faces and the tours featured gorgeous architecture and design, as well as lots of sunshine. 

Tickets sold out to 600 guests who traveled from 28 cities in Oregon and 6 cities in Washington to view 4 homes, all nestled into 1 street. And they helped raise close to $30,000 in one day of tour fun that will support Restore Oregon, our state’s only nonprofit working to leverage relationships and resources to preserve, protect, and pass forward Oregon's heritage—including mid-century modern design!

Many thanks to our generous sponsors whose support is helping bring our 2023 Modernism events to life. And thank you to our tour goers for supporting our second biggest fundraising event of the year and celebrating the preservation of mid-century modern design with us.

Thank you Modernism Sponsors: Bramske Studio ArchitectureModern Homes PortlandReal Estate Through DesignArciformHaley Lewis CreativeScott Edwards ArchitectureMiller Paint ● Anthony and Marti Belluschi

 

The post A Rummer Wrap Up appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
Thank You for Joining us to Celebrate Mid-Century Modern https://restoreoregon.org/2022/05/10/50618/ Tue, 10 May 2022 20:01:16 +0000 https://restoreoregon.org/?p=50618

Thank you to everyone who joined us for our MCM Design Celebration this past weekend. It was SO MUCH FUN to gather in-person! Thank you for coming out! We hope you found the event fun and educational. Our goal was to inspire you to save old places and seek out Oregon's cultural heritage. This event […]

The post Thank You for Joining us to Celebrate Mid-Century Modern appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>

Thank YOU! You Make Saving Mid-Century Possible!

Thank you to everyone who joined us for our MCM Design Celebration this past weekend.
It was SO MUCH FUN to gather in-person! Thank you for coming out! We hope you found the event fun and educational. Our goal was to inspire you to save old places and seek out Oregon's cultural heritage.

This event also served at our first in-person fundraiser in three years. Thank you for joining us! Your participation helped us raise over $10,000 this weekend. Individual donors and supporters like you make up the bulk of our revenue. Thank you for making our work possible.

Proceeds from this event will support Restore Oregon’s preservation and educational programming, and help us continue to fulfill our mission to preserve, reuse and pass forward the historic places and spaces that reflect Oregon’s diverse cultural heritage and make our communities inclusive, vibrant, liveable and sustainable.

Special thanks to Jeff Weithman, Paul McKean & homeowners Aaron Cain & Annie Wong who made this event possible. From the bottom of our hearts, thank you for your time and generosity.

And, thank you to our event sponsors Jupiter Hotel and Bramske Studio!​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Quick Event Recap

​​​​​​​At the May 6 MCM Design Celebration, Restore Oregon unveiled Oregon Made, A Tour of Regional Mid-Century Modern Architecture. Chock full of interior and exterior photos (both period and contemporary) and insightful commentary about this beloved regional architectural style, Oregon Made is the ideal primer for anyone eager to learn how a worldwide design movement was adapted to function in harmony with the unique climate, landscape and indigenous materials of the Pacific Northwest. Get your copy of Oregon Made online and have it shipped direct.

Thank You Paul McKean!
More than 130 attendees joined us for our lecture from architect Paul McKean lead an informative lecture on sensitive MCM renovation, including his exciting restoration of architect Richard Campbell’s home in Southwest Portland.

Thank you Paul! And, thank you for all your hard work restoring these iconic homes.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Thank You to Our Fellow Authors/Publishers Who Joined Us!

If you missed them at the event, you can find them online for purchase. They make great gifts all year long:
- Atomic Ranch - Remodeled Marvels
- Architectural Heritage Center - Touring the Central Eastside: Architecture + History
- William Willingham - Collegiate Architecture & Landscape in the West
- Lord & Schryver Conservancy - The Northwest Gardens of Lord & Schryver

The post Thank You for Joining us to Celebrate Mid-Century Modern appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
Cars Changed Everything https://restoreoregon.org/2021/06/10/cars-changed-everything-mid-century-landscapes/ Thu, 10 Jun 2021 21:27:56 +0000 https://www.restoreoregon.org/?p=46570

The Evolution of the Highway, the Car and, the Mid-Century Landscapeby Jonathan Konkol, AICP The decades immediately following World War II have been mythologized as a time of affluence and stability. New technologies reshaped homes and cities, while a new suburban landscape took shape providing new kinds of homes and neighborhoods with an endless array […]

The post Cars Changed Everything appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>

The Evolution of the Highway, the Car and, the Mid-Century Landscape

by Jonathan Konkol, AICP

The decades immediately following World War II have been mythologized as a time of affluence and stability. New technologies reshaped homes and cities, while a new suburban landscape took shape providing new kinds of homes and neighborhoods with an endless array of consumer goods to fill them.

Aesthetic preferences changed considerably during this period, but fundamentally, the most important forces shaping new domestic landscapes were finance and transportation. The postwar period ushered in a new era in home finance, putting the dream of homeownership within reach of many more families with the creation of the Federal Housing Administration. This new agency provided backing for mortgages and changes to the tax code gave preferential treatment to the financing of owner-occupied homes. All this set the stage for a system that created intergenerational wealth for middle class white families hitherto unseen in the world. Minorities were largely excluded from this boom, by redlining and de facto or de jure segregation, until addressed by the civil rights legislation of the Johnson administration.

Portland experienced a somewhat different trajectory from the postwar boom of the rest of the country. After the demobilization of wartime industries, Oregon returned to being mostly a resource extraction economy. While the middle class boomed back east where urbanization was more dominant, and manufacturing and finance were a much larger part of the economy, far less “inner ring” suburbia exists in the Portland area. In fact, much of what was then known as “mid-county” was only annexed into the City of Portland in the early 1990s. Construction of Sunset Highway opened pockets of farmland for development on Portland’s west side, while I-84 provided convenient access for new residents as builders snapped up tracts in the unincorporated area between Portland and Gresham. Pre-World War II, this area had been home to a mixture of small farms and orchards interspersed with some light industrial and residential pockets. Being unincorporated, it lacked zoning or requirements for infrastructure.

One result of consolidation was the increasing homogenization of subdivisions. Because homeownership had become most families’ primary vehicle for building wealth, protection of that investment became a source of anxiety. Exclusivity was a common theme of the marketing materials of the time. Indeed, in addition to the overt racial discrimination of the era, a more subtle and previously unknown level of class segregation developed with the creation of residential tracts. To protect homes from losing value due to association with less well-heeled neighbors, tracts of homes began to represent increasingly narrow bands of family income, such that new neighborhoods were more finely parsed by income than the U.S. tax code!

While economic forces drove the market for new construction on the fringes of American cities, the physical form of urban areas was radically transformed by the Federal Highway Act of 1956. Intended as an inter-city network, legislation was rapidly seized upon by municipal governments and politicians who morphed it into an intra-city transportation spending package. To paraphrase Winston Churchill, we shape our transportation systems, then our transportation systems shape us. Prior to mass adoption of the car, American cities in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were shaped by radial networks of streetcars. The commercial boulevards of inner Portland reflect a way of life common to much of our country prior to World War II. Downtown workers would ride the streetcar home, stopping when they reached their streets. Shops lined these boulevards, allowing for convenient purchases before walking into neighborhoods of relatively closely spaced houses.

Cars changed everything. No longer bound by fixed transportation and the need to walk from home to transportation, land use patterns became much more dispersed. Car-based lifestyles encouraged development of serpentine streets and scattered development. Urban features like sidewalks were often deemed unnecessary and even inimical to the bucolic image of these new hybrids of town and country.

These “auto suburbs” had a prewar precedent in neighborhoods like Portland’s Laurelhurst and its diminutive cousin Garthwick (located between Sellwood and the Waverly Country Club golf course). Nationwide, similar neighborhoods catering to the growing professional class cropped up from Los Angeles to Long Island. Yet for the most part, they remained a novelty until changes unleashed in the postwar economy made them more desirable. Land added to cities in tracts, and platted as additions, typically followed a modular pattern, extending the existing grid system.

In the postwar era, it became increasingly common for builders to buy a farm or orchard and develop it as a self-contained neighborhood, with an internal network serving lots within, and a few entry points along the perimeter. It also became increasingly common for a developer to purchase, sub-divide and plat a property, install utilities and build roads, then sell lots to one or more builders as part of a pre-arranged scheme. In a few cases, these entities were one and the same, with a sophisticated developer undertaking both the “underground” and “vertical” aspects of development, allowing the developer unprecedented control over the look and feel of the completed neighborhood.

As the real estate and finance worlds became increasingly commodified and globalized, this trend only accelerated. The Mid-Century neighborhoods of east Portland represent an intermediate point between the gridded pre-war development format and the self-contained pods of the late 20th century. Houses were spread out, cross-streets were few and far between, and sidewalks were scarce, but neighborhoods nonetheless remained connected to a loose grid of streets connecting all of East Portland.

Automotive influence on neighborhood design extended beyond the layout of blocks and streets. The very shape of houses and yards was a result of the speed and flexibility of personal transportation, as well as the storage needs of cars themselves.

Pre-war plats often measured 50’ wide by 100’ deep. Lots and houses were oriented with the short end facing the street. This eye toward efficiency meant more doors per street and more efficiency in providing utility services. Post-war subdivisions upended this pattern with lots wider than city lots, which in some In East Portland’s Mid-Century neighborhoods, lots range from 70 to 100 feet wide. House footprints are turned 90 degrees, and the long faces of homes are oriented parallel to the street. Two-car garages can occupy a third of a home’s total frontage. Front yards are often large too, with houses slid back on their sites, the apotheosis of the suburban front lawn. 

Early Mid-Century neighborhoods represent the aspirational nature of green suburbia and peaceful family life. The horizontality of their landscapes is striking. Single-story houses spread across wide lots, freed from the space-saving requirements of narrow urban confines. Meant to be experienced from behind the wheel of a car, the spaces between houses in these neighborhoods are as integral to the Mid-Century experience as the homes themselves, stretching in response to the speed with which they slide past a viewer’s car window-framed gaze.

The post Cars Changed Everything appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
Mid-Century Modern Cultural Landscapes https://restoreoregon.org/2021/05/13/mid-century-modern-cultural-landscapes/ Thu, 13 May 2021 06:06:00 +0000 https://refresh.restoreoregon.org/?p=46306

By Laurie Matthews  What is a Cultural Landscape? The prevailing definition for a cultural landscape in the United States comes from the National Park Service which defines it “as a geographic area, including both cultural and natural resources… associated with a historic event, activity, or person, or exhibiting other cultural or aesthetic values.” The United […]

The post Mid-Century Modern Cultural Landscapes appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
By Laurie Matthews 

What is a Cultural Landscape?

The prevailing definition for a cultural landscape in the United States comes from the National Park Service which defines it “as a geographic area, including both cultural and natural resources… associated with a historic event, activity, or person, or exhibiting other cultural or aesthetic values.”

The United Nations Environmental, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) defines cultural landscapes internationally as “works of nature and humankind that express a long and intimate relationship between people and their natural environment.” While places like the Grand Canyon, National Mall, Golden Gate Park, and Devils Tower have national — and even international — significance, cultural landscapes vary widely in size and type. Previously considered to be settings for other historic or cultural resources, cultural landscapes are now understood to be historic resources in their own right.

The next great frontier for exploring Mid-Century Modern (MCM) design in Oregon is in its landscapes. As with MCM architecture, the best landscape work of this era encompasses both large-scale regional planning projects and more intimate and personal residential projects.

Following the form and function of Mid-Century Modern residential architecture, MCM cultural landscapes are restrained, while also respecting and highlighting the natural lines of a home’s design and mirroring the rectangular, transparent, and open forms of the structures themselves.

MCM landscapes build on the order imposed by modern design while allowing nature room to take its own course – especially in the Pacific Northwest where growing seasons are long and outdoor spaces are often incorporated into a home’s overall living space.

Other notable features of MCM landscapes include low-cost and low-care plants that create distinctive, private outdoor spaces in densely populated areas. The ultimate goal of MCM landscape design is to facilitate the seamless transition between indoor and outdoor spaces – a quality unsurpassed outside of the Pacific Northwest.

Although many others contributed to the field of landscape design in the mid-20th century, three noted landscape architects come to mind when considering iconic MCM landscape works: Barbara Fealy, Lawrence Halprin, and Robert Royston.

Barbara Fealy (1903-2000) lived and practiced in Oregon and was the designer of the Wessinger Garden, many notable and prized residential gardens at the Oregon Coast, and a number of larger projects including Salishan Lodge (where she worked with developer John Gray) and Timberline Lodge (where she worked with the U.S. Forest Service.) Fealy’s work at Salishan Lodge raised her profile tremendously, after which she became one of the most sought-after landscape architects in Oregon. She chose her projects and her collaborators with great care. Other notable works include designs for Catlin-Gabel School, Oregon School of Arts and Crafts, and Leach Botanical Garden. She also often collaborated with architects John Storrs and Saul Zaik.

In 2013, the above-mentioned Wessinger Garden was documented through the Historic American Landscape Survey (HALS), which is held at the Library of Congress.

Lawrence Halprin (1916-2009) created an iconic series of parks in downtown Portland, Oregon. Linked by pedestrian promenades, these public spaces include Ira Keller Fountain, Pettygrove Park, Lovejoy Fountain, and the Source Fountain. Ira Keller Fountain, co-designed with Angela Danadijeva was described by New York Times architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable as “one of the most important urban spaces since the Renaissance” when it opened in 1970.

Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2013, these urban parks are arguably among Oregon’s most recognized works of the MCM era, and an inspiration to landscape architects, urban designers, and architects from around the world. Their innovative use of water – and the interactive quality of the fountains – heavily influenced later designs in Portland, including Salmon Street Springs, Pioneer Square, Tanner Springs, and Director Park.

One of Oregon’s most iconic landscape innovations of this era was the land use planning law, Senate Bill 100, which created growth boundaries around existing urban areas. Following the passage of that law, Lawrence Halprin developed future scenario planning for the entire Willamette Valley, which focused on concentrating urban development and preserving agricultural lands of farms and ranches.

Robert Royston (1918-2008) also made lasting contributions to MCM landscape design. Sunriver Resort, developed by John Gray, was designed by Royston. Sunriver is an excellent example of the innovations that were occurring in Oregon’s landscapes during an era when there was a great deal of focus on community planning and the emerging environmental movement.

Developed in response to the heavy, overly-ornamented and laborious aesthetics meant to display ostentatious wealth during the Victorian era, modernist landscape design was the first to practically address the effects of urbanization and rapid suburbanization in the post-War years. The low-maintenance and practical qualities of modern residential spaces became elements of neighborhood and regional land use planning, addressing the need for green space in urban areas and the need for cohesion in suburban areas.

From the inner-city Halprin Fountains to the sprawling neighborhoods of east Portland, the beauty of MCM landscapes lies in their enduring ability to provide living spaces that seamlessly combine architecture and nature. For this they are celebrated, mimicked, re-experienced, admired, and now preserved as significant cultural landscapes.

Mid-Century Modern Landscapes

The post Mid-Century Modern Cultural Landscapes appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
Mid-Century Modern Design Series | DAY 2: Celebrating the Pacific Northwest Regional Aesthetic https://restoreoregon.org/2020/03/11/mcm-2020-home-tour/ Wed, 11 Mar 2020 19:28:57 +0000 https://restoreoregon.org/?p=43017

Legendary designs. Uninterrupted glass walls. Intimate courtyards. Indigenous materials. On day two of Restore Oregon’s Mid-Century Modern Design Series, attendees can enjoy a carefully curated Mid-Century Modern Home Tour featuring the archetypal work of mid-century master architects including Pietro Belluschi, Frank Shell, Walter Gordon, John Storrs, and Saul Zaik. This self-guided driving tour provides timeless […]

The post Mid-Century Modern Design Series | DAY 2: Celebrating the Pacific Northwest Regional Aesthetic appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>
Legendary designs. Uninterrupted glass walls. Intimate courtyards. Indigenous materials.
On day two of Restore Oregon’s Mid-Century Modern Design Series, attendees can enjoy a carefully curated Mid-Century Modern Home Tour featuring the archetypal work of mid-century master architects including Pietro Belluschi, Frank Shell, Walter Gordon, John Storrs, and Saul Zaik. This self-guided driving tour provides timeless examples of our region’s famed architects’ legendary designs that have been sensitively adapted for modern living–from the uninterrupted glass walls and functional, intimate courtyards of Pietro Belluschi, to Walter Gordon’s devotedness to using indigenous materials that celebrate the Pacific Northwest Regional aesthetic.
Pietro Belluschi | Sutor House, 1938 | SW Portland – Skyline Blvd.
This house is an iconic example of the developing Northwest Regional Modernism Style including oneness with nature and some Japanese influences, such as the woven wood entry ceiling. It is a monument to honest materials and fine craftsmanship. Fortunately, this home’s various owners have been devoted to keeping the house as original as possible, as much in homage to Belluschi as to his original client’s last wishes.

Photo courtesy of Sally Painter Photography
 
 

Frank Shell | Blosser Whitehead House, 1958 | SE Portland – Eastmoreland
Portland architect Frank Shell was not only a pioneer in the modern movement for churches and schools, he designed several residences on par with the Northwest’s master architecture. The Blosser Whitehead residence, boasting floor-to-ceiling window walls on two floors connected via the living room’s spiral staircase, had only one owner until its sale in 2014. This home is a classic mid-century open-floor design by Shell, who notoriously created floor plans flexible enough to change and adapt to modern needs.
Photo courtesy of Tim Niou Photography
 
John Storrs | SW Portland, 1962
This dwelling by John Storrs is representative of his love for exposed beam and tongue and groove ceilings in natural wood. Fir is used extensively in this home. There is a commanding stone fireplace with the same stone used sensitively on the entry floor. There are his signature expansive picture
windows in the main ground floor spaces.

Photo courtesy of Tim Niou Photography
 
 


Walter Gordon | Copenhagen House, 1953 | Lake Oswego
The house is nestled beneath massive old trees, and despite close neighbors, the careful landscaping creates a feeling of seclusion. The several thoughtfully placed views of the outdoor spaces entice those inside to extend their living spaces beyond the walls of the home, and this is precisely what the homeowners have done. The outdoor areas were enhanced by the high-quality work of landscape architect Karen Ford whose style complements and joins well with the Walter Gordon aesthetic.

Photo courtesy of Tim Niou Photography

 
Saul Zaik | SW Portland, 1975
This is the “newest” house on the tour and a wonderful example of how Saul dealt with changing materials and experimented with new proportions. Once beyond the cozy entryway, the space immediately opens up into the main hallway with a soaring ceiling. The view is 100% Zaik, another treehouse perched to provide the maximum in privacy and view.
Learn more about the Mid-Century Modern Design Series
Or purchase tickets today!

The post Mid-Century Modern Design Series | DAY 2: Celebrating the Pacific Northwest Regional Aesthetic appeared first on Restore Oregon.

]]>