INSIDE LOOKING OUT
The need for shelter is ancient; the luxury to invite nature back inside is the result of early 20th century advancements in durable metals and stronger glass. These new materials gave innovative architects exactly what they needed to radically integrate the outdoors with our living spaces. The apex of this movement found expression in the mid-century modern style, particularly in the United States.
Frank Lloyd Wright was one of the first American architects to rethink bunker-like homes with few windows and bring us closer to our external surroundings. Inspired by how Japanese culture assimilated nature into interiors, he sought an indoor/outdoor integration with the Prairie School, a progressive American architectural style that rejected the formal Greek and Roman designs of Europe. During the first two decades of the 20th century, Wright promoted what he called “organic architecture.” This was the radical idea that the home should celebrate the landscape it is in, rather than standing in contrast to it.
Photo by David Hartwell
As a rapidly growing metropolis in the 1930s and '40s, Los Angeles, Calif., became a sandbox for architects, who were drawn by the open spaces, expanding need for housing, and the availability of industrial materials.
Let's look at two exemplary mid-century modern homes in Los Angeles.
Photo by David Hartwell
In 1957, CH “Buck” and Carlotta Stahl hired a young architect to design their dream home. Built of exposed glass, steel, and concrete on a precarious hillside, the Stahl House would become a signature work. It was also part of the Case Study House program, an initiative by Arts and Architecture magazine that commissioned major architects to create inexpensive model homes asa response to the U.S. housing boom.
Showcased in films, television shows, and pictorials, the house has also become a Los Angeles landmark. Its place in American culture was further cemented in 2013 when it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Case Study House #22 is still owned by the Stahl family and is open for tours. For more info, go to stahlhouse.com.