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| 1. Float Along. Modestly sized, mid-century modern homes were often light, thin and screen-like and would only gently touch the earth. More often than not these homes had an impermanent quality that belies their intrinsic ability to do more with less. |
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| 3. Reach Out. A roof shouldn't just shelter the enclosed space, it should reach out and extend out to the landscape to define and shelter an outdoor area as well. And in so doing control how the sunlight enters and warms the interior space. |
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| 4. Be Not So Common. A small and modest ranch, as common as can be in the 1950s, is expanded in a way that respects the original structure while having the lightness and brightness of mid-century modern. This time around with better glass and other materials for a more efficient structure. |
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by Tracy Stone AIA
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| 5. Make No Small Doors. Well-built, efficient and easy to use, big doors are readily available. Whether sliding, telescoping, folding, overhead or other, big doors can connect the inside and outside and blur the distinction between the two like never before. And while we're at it, no grilles, grids, muntins, etc. Just glass. Big, beautiful, clear, energy-efficient glass. |
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by Gary Hutton
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| 6. Enjoy Going Barefoot. Connecting interiors with exteriors and employing low maintenance and sustainable materials for our floors will enable us to live the casual and informal life we want. And even our bedrooms want to have that outdoor connection. So design the home to enable that. |
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| 7. Create Not So Open Plans. No longer do we find Dad in the den reading the newspaper and smoking his pipe while Mom is in the kitchen preparing the dinner while the children are in the living room watching Howdy Doody. Now we want spaces that promote togetherness and interaction. Yet, too open can be as stifling as too closed. So create separate zones and areas. Change levels and ceiling heights. Make it so you can pop your head up, see what's going on, and go from there. |
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| 8. Keep It Family Friendly. Let the kids write on the walls (they will anyway) in a place that's open and on view. No hiding here, just art work and messages everyone will be proud of. |
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by Tracy Stone AIA
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| 10. Add a Pop-Up. Avoid that overly horizontal, 8-foot-tall and boring ceiling plane. Like the top of a 1960s micro-bus camper, pop it up and install some clerestory windows to increase spaciousness and let the sunshine in. |
As for America returning to an age of looking forward as exemplified in what we call "Mid-century Modern": God I hope so!
Furniture too - I've carefully saved up, planned and purchased classic MCM pieces my entire adult life. They still look as cool as the day I bought them, and they have increased in value. My only worry is now that MCM is"in", will it someday become "out".
Easy to mount right out of the box on any drywall surface. Elegant and functional (patent-pending) modular design, created by 2012 ICFF winning designer, Eric Pfeiffer of San Francisco.
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