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erin0018

Help - Curb Appeal/Updates needed for Mid Century Modern House

7 years ago

This home was build in 1967 as a sorority house. It's lovingly (that might be gracious) referred to as the Big Brown Box or the Dentist office. Without doing major construction, I'm looking for any ideas to make the place more homey & less commercial. A few details/constraints: the home still exists as a sorority house on the edge of a major University (so there is some concern with light pranking/vandalism for anything that's not nailed down). It's on a heavily trafficked road that is prone to car accidents into the front landscaping/wall as well as road salt in the winter. This is in a Northern city with a fair amount of snow nearly half of the year, so full, beautiful landscaping only goes so far. Would love to hear ideas big & small - the budget for improvements is probably small now, but in the next 3-5 years, could save for the larger improvements! (I've smudged out the letters/house numbers on these photos.)


Thanks!



Comments (16)

  • 7 years ago

    I'm sorry, but I don't think there's any way this side of Orion's Belt that building is going to look homey. In fact, I'm wondering how a building with so few windows could be any kind of residence at all.

    On the other hand, it is a gorgeous building.

    It seems your short term plan is to keep it for sorority use. What is the long-term plan?

  • 7 years ago

    Thanks, Rina -that was sort of what I feared, but was hoping that somebody had a brilliant, out of the box idea to change that! The house will be a sorority as long as there is a need for that, so I don't anticipate that changing anytime soon. There is a huge skylight on the roof, letting in a lot of light. The bedrooms are around the exterior of the upper floors (each with a long, skinny window pictured) and the center room has windows into the hallway adding more light. The house very comfortably sleeps 40+ people, so the scale is quite large.

  • 7 years ago
    last modified: 7 years ago

    The building reminds me of a university library or classroom building. It would be a huge mistake to try to make this place look "homey". Embrace the architecture for what it is. Simplify and modernize the landscaping -- replace the funky curved retaining walls with walls of an aesthetic equal to the building with straight lines and quality materials. Think interesting foliage, but not the current hodge-podge -- simplify, use repetition. Be sure the lighting fixtures are top quality mid-century modern (safely bolted into place to prevent theft), and plenty of them for safety. Remove oversize shrubs flanking the steps to open the view to the entry (and correspondingly the view from inside toward the street).

    If you have oodles of money, commission a mural or some metal exterior wall sculpture to liven up the blank brick "canvas". (Edit: I should add, that might lower the value of the property if not done really really well.)

    Erin B thanked Kim in PL (SoCal zone 10/Sunset 24)
  • 7 years ago
    More pics...maybe a water feature or create a courtyard with seating.
  • 7 years ago
    One more pic...an architect could get you going in the right direction.
  • 7 years ago

    Nancy, band staining the brick is a brilliant idea! It really makes a huge difference.

  • 7 years ago

    I think it's a kinda nice formal Brutalist building.

  • PRO
    7 years ago

    Is it in the budget to replace the windows and doors? Better quality, well-designed windows with black mullions, and glass spandrels would be an improvement.

    A lot could be accomplished with more modern landscaping as suggested above. To begin, lose the Techno-Bloc retaining walls next to the front steps.

    Erin B thanked Weil Friedman Architects
  • PRO
    7 years ago
    I happen to love this style of building, I own its 1981 cousin. IMHO the stripes fight the strong form of the building, but adding a logo and lighting is great. We opted to paint our windows and the blank areas between them dark bronze to unify that together. I think the landscaping is all too fussy, the raised beds etc. depending on your area I would remove the raised beds, add some evergreen trees and maples to soften the landscaping without trying to be an English garden.
    Erin B thanked Ellsworth Design Build
  • PRO
    7 years ago

    It is what it is and short of spending $$$ there's not much you can do to this hulking mass of a building. You can stain the brick white or start ivy growing over the building.

  • 7 years ago
    last modified: 7 years ago

    Remove the meatballs and amateur garden center retaining walls in favor of one single low horizontal retaining wall. Pick a material that relates to the exterior choices. Matching brick if you could. Cot-ten steel possibly.

    The wall should have a decent horizontal space between it and the street where some larger scaled pots and concrete jigsaw puzzle blocking “garden” with some heavy “sculptures” can shine. Look at the standard blockade pot planting’s meant to keep vehicles from ramming public buildings. You will need an expert to design this, and implement it. Maybe Phase 1 is Design, and Phase 2 is Implement.

    The smaller space between the top of the wall and building can be actual planting’s, but mostly drought resistant grasses and maybe some very low growing junipers.

    The building is a STAR, and needs to be more revealed than hidden by landscaping.

    Also think about a rooftop terrace and garden if it’s flat. Would be cool to see a hint of green in the sky peeking over like a secret paradise.

    Erin B thanked User
  • 7 years ago

    Cor-ten sadly stains sidewalks. :((((

  • 7 years ago

    Statues, no matter how heavy or anchored, are just too great a temptation for pranks on campus.

    Erin B thanked decoenthusiaste
  • 7 years ago
    last modified: 7 years ago

    I would add a wrap around screened in porch, black trim on the top and bottom, stain the concrete, paint the side windows, add some hydrangea, and a front door.

    Erin B thanked ilikefriday
  • 7 years ago

    I am now every modernist landscape architect since 2005...

    Make the front lawn perfectly flat with a retaining wall on either side of the walkway.

    Install a grass lawn. Plant it with a small grouping of river birch in center of each, centered on the blank walls on either side.

    On the right, plant a big block of Muhly grass to the street corner. On the far left, put in a sculptural group that includes seating on white gravel, but it must be incredibly pretentious.

    That will be $500k for the design.

    Lol.

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