2s Caoilal Journal Building Section, Friday, March 10, 1950 . A national trend away from the tradition in house design and toward contemporary or modem ideas, exploiting broad win dows and blending indoor and outdoor living, is now apparent in every section. Rambling one-story houses, popularly nicknamed ranch houses. are more and more in demand. Even Texas, home of the ranch, has discovered the suburban ranch house, while the name has been stretched so far around New York that a "two-story ranch nouse - nas oeen aaverusea. Here are reports on what homes people want today in the soum, soutnwesi far west ana Midwest Prefers Variety in Styles ' By WILLIAM J. CONWAY AP Newjfeiittirei Writer Ranch type homes are grow ing in " popularity in the mid west. The best market Is in houses that sell for $11,000 or less. Those are strong style and price trends. But they don't tell the whole story. Midwestern building, like midwestern " weather, features variety. "The day of look-alike, peas- in-the-pod houses is past in this region," says Martin C. Huggett, executive vice president of the Chicago Metropolitan Home Builders association. "In order to sell, we have to give the pub lic a diversity of design and an inviting appearance." The site narrow lots in cities and wide lots farther out has a. big influence on home plans. "Two-story brick houses still are very salable in the city," Huggett says. "But the one story house, generally dubbed the ranch type, is gaining. Out in the suburbs and the country, the one-story house is more pop ular." Joseph E. Merrion. one of the bigger builders in the midwest and former president of the Na tional Association of Home Builders, says homes in the $10, 00'' and $11,000 class sell read ily "But," he adds, "the great un tapped market is just below those figures. The general idea is to get a house suited to a family with an income of not more than $60 a week." If you drive through the mid west, you will see new houses in a wide range of size and style. Most of them are shaped along more or less familiar lines. But there also are houses of the newest fashion contemporary and modern designs that get away from traditional patterns. George Fred Keck, noted Chi cago architect and modernist .whose work takes him around the central states, reports: "There seems to be a ten dency among builders to go into contemporary design more and more. Although the number of modern houses is comparatively small, the influence of these houses is tremendous. "Up to the '30s most of the architectural schools taught men how to build in the tradi tional manner. For the past ten years all the young people who came out of these schools had learned to design in the modern manner. This influence is going to be felt" Texas Rediscovers The Ranch House By MARVIN BRAU AP SUH Writer Texas home building has heard the call of the wide open spaces. The trend is toward ranch and rambler types. Low - roofed, wide - eaved, ground hugging homes city cousins of the real Texas ranch houses are displacing in pop ularity the high-gabled English style cottage, the stuccoed, tile roofed Spanish house and the so-called Colonial two-story. In some instances, subdivis ions originally laid out for two story homes have been re-zoned for ramblers. The style has changed lot s i z e s . The 50-foot lot is almost forgotten. The most popular now is 70 feet wide. midwest: A bookstore manager sairt th popularity of the ranch is so great he has difficulty keeping booklets and drawings of this nouse in stock. Since earlv davs. Tp,,n ranch. crs built their homes with wide eaves, breezeways and porches for shade from the? hlirnintf nm Prevailing Texas breezes blow u me iiuu oi Mexico, so the real ranch houses were built with ells and wines tn siw ev ery room a southern exposure to snare every zepnyr. The new trend extends wn to lower cost homes. Rooms are smaller. Modern gadgets are fewer. But roof lines and floor plans are similar in all mw brackets. The accent is aim nn win dows. Large picture windows are popular. Spacious porches an patios are a rule in the more expensive homes. Though most 05 Texas is nmed fnr natural gas heating, a hospitable fire place is a must in homes of me dium and higher price levels. ai ine same tune central heat ing, formerlv found mainlv in larger Texas homes, is spread ing to all homes. Compact heat ing units that fit in large closets have made it posible for the average cottage to have this luxury. Ducts used for warm air in winter are used for circulat ing cool air in summer. Wilev Roberts, a direftnr of the Dallas Home Builders asso ciation, attributes the spread of the ranch style to modern buildins methods. The tall rnnf gave way to the material-sav ing low roof, he says, because of improvements in insulation and air cooling devices. There is a hie demand fnr homes with two bedrooms and two baths, Roberts reports, ev en when an extra bath adds about $1,000 to the cost. Older people, who used to be satisfied to stay on in the old homestead, now want new homes just like newlyweds, he says. The mo dern two-bedroom house with its time- saving dishwasher, washing machine and garbage disposal unit appeals to them. Most construction in the Lone Star state is of brick or stone veneer. A new favorite is "an tique" brick. California Goes Contemporary By RICHARD G. CUSH1NG AP StsfT Wrtur Ground hugging, flat-roofed, radiant - heated houses with broad expanses of glass are catching on along the west coast as never before. Banks and the FHA are com ing to believe the so-called mo dern house is a safe risk, since it is more and more in demand. People are going along with imaginative young architects in acceptance of the unconvention al. And, encouraged by the trend in the west, architects with a flair for functionalism are migrating west in a steady stream. What are these modern homes? Although they differ widely, they all use more glass, more wood inside and out, and most noticeably make full use of the outdoors in the form of patios and sundecks. Many are built on concrete slabs, in which are buried net works of heating pipes. Most have flat roofs, with overhangs to furnish shade. In general the modern houses of the west coast are warm crea tions of redwood, brick, stone I.V.rlj ...Tr 11 i tjy -t j y3 ' I pOplpgS H j i4 j ! BUTTERFLY ROOF insures light on uphill side of this hillside house designed by Benjamin Polk, 659 Bay St., San Francisco. and glass, built with a great deal of casual outdoor living in mind. They hug the hillsides, taking advantage of views. The trend is toward simplici ity, easy maintenance, more light, better traffic patterns. The dining room has virtually disappeared in favor of a dining alcove, sometimes separated from the kitchen only by a counter. In areas of temperate climates the garage has largely vanished, a simple car shelter taking its place. Generally speaking, archi tects in the San Francisco bay area pioneered this type of con struction, fitting it to climate, spectacular views and vegeta tion. Houses in this section re quire less "insulation, permit easier heating, and, allow much glass and flat roofs, in the ab sence of snow. Just as the California bunga low and the California ranch style swept the country, many architects and builders feel the California modern will become popular elsewhere, with modi fications fitted to climatic con ditions. South Breaks With Tradition By ED BERND ap sua writer Grandma's antiques may be out of place in ranch type hous es, but that s where you 11 find them in Dixie today. The trend of new housing in the South is definitely modern. Not the extreme modern but the people who are building houses around Atlanta, for in stance, now lean toward the long, low house with all rooms on one floor, with large win dows and overhanging eaves. And, to take advantage of the moderate climate, new houses provide for plenty of outdoor living. John W. Cherry, an Atlanta architect, says older people still like "old fashioned" houses. By old fashioned, he means with basements, two stories and an attic, and no extreme angles and lines. But younger couples and they're in the majority among home builders now want mo dern, livable plans. fTrj ioii io k i s J The most popular plans call for two or three bedrooms, two baths, a large combination liv ing and dining room, usually in a "T" or "L" shape. "Some young brides shudder when they think how the furni ture they've inherited will look in a modern house," the archi tect says, "but they make it fit, somehow." The wide eaves and the shape of the house serve double pur pose. They help keep out the heat of the southern summer, and they provide sheltered ter races for outdoor living. Building restrictions keep down the more extreme modern type. City and county restric tions are not so severe, but regu lations imposed by private sub divisions block modernistic structures. The Old South, Colonial house with the tall white columns is pre-war pre-Civil war be cause of building costs. 'The cost of mill work on the columns alone would be prohib itive now." Cherry says. 'DON'T BE AFRAID OF COLOR' California's liberal use of color is spreading across the nation. A few years ago New York's staid Fifth Avenue was shocked by a yellow door. Today yellow doors, red doors, blue doors are just among many splashes of color that add individuality to homes everywhere. One smart new one-and-a-half story rambling type of house has a roof of deep green asphalt shingles, a bedroom wing finished in dark brown stained wooden shingles with bright yellow shutters and yellow trim under the eaves. The living room wing is white painted brick with mortar extruding like frosting between the joints. A final filip of color is a bright yellow flower box under a broad pic ture window planted with red geraniums. Frederic H. Rahr, a professional color consultant who selected the exterior colors for 30,000 homes in 156 federal public housing projects, says "color is a convenient means of personalizing homes. The way to make a house stand out is to consider all the colors you can, then choose those you honestly like best. Don't be afraid to trust your own judgment Use all your initiative and ingenuity." Rahr advises beginning a color scheme with the roof, which is usually the largest unbroken mass that meets the eye. "The roof sets the color pace," he says, "just as the dress or suit determines the colors a woman will choose for hat, gloves and other accessories." Modern roofing materials can be obtained in a variety of hues. It used to be that red tile or blue slate were the only alternatives to a weathered gray root However, today asphalt shingles which, according to the Department of Commerce, fill more than 80 per cent of the market, are being made in both solid and blended colors. BUTTERFLY HOUSE HANGS ON HILLSIDE One trouble with building a house on the side of a hill is that the uphill side often suffers from lack of light. In California where more and more houses are being built on hillsides, Benjamin Polk, of 659 Bay street, San Francisco, offers an answer to this prob lem. He has worked out a house with a roof that soars upward from the center line. Viewed from the end, the house looks like a butterfly. The upward slant of the roof at the eaves lets in far more light on the uphill side, and on the downhill side it increases the window space that accents so many modern homes. Polk also has provided "fins" on his balcony which give the bed rooms on that side complete pri vacy. Interior drains carry off wa ter from the roof trough. The living room fireplace is set in the uphill wall, next to the terrace, so that its reverse side may be used as an outdoor barbecue. For both floors and ceilings. Polk uses a plank-and-beam construction principle instead of the conventional joist. He thereby gains still more space for high ceilings, and makes room underneath for an extra bedroom, bath, and a playroom if family needs require. Flat-Rim Bowl Helps Make Bathroom Vanity With a flat-rim lavatory bowl, making a combination vanity lavatory is easy. At either side of the lavatory and flush with the rim, a plastic topped, water-resistant board is attached firmly to the wall, and joints around the bowl and at the wall are sealed with plastic cement. A well-lighted mirror is placed on the wall above. Extra storage space can be provided by building a plastic topped floor cabinet around the flat-rimmed sink. Plastic col ors are available to harmonize with the bathroom fixtures, walls and floors. Do not sow seeds indoors too early. In a greenhouse, 8 to 10 weeks before the plants can be set out in. the garden is enough; in a hot-bed, S to 8 weeks, in a cold-frame, or box in the win dow, 4 to 6 weeks, will be early enough.