Eichler homes are within the most successful examples of modernist architecture for the mass market. Joseph Eichler was the developer who, inspired by modernist architects as Richard Neutra and Frank Lloyd Wright, brought quality but affordable architecture to post-WWII American families and across the entire mid-century period.
Eichler homes are more than just homes, they represent a way of living. Still today their unique and iconic design is synonym of a lifestyle which the new owners must and are more than willing to embrace. This Atrium-style Eichler house luxuriates in views of bird of paradise plants and the other lush nature it is surrounded by. For this project the clients, who had undergone several previous house renovations, were determined to stick with an established budget from the beginning.
Klopf Architecture helped them modernize their Eichler with a premium appearance on a reasonable budget. Quincy Jones and Frederick Emmons in A competitive man by nature and cultivated in the tough-minded atmosphere of America's financial capital, Joe was primed for leadership in business. He would eventually join the highly competitive wholesale food industry, working for his in-laws' family-run poultry concern.
The Eichlers moved to the West Coast in , where Joe assumed the position of treasurer for the family business, which was based in San Francisco. By this time the Eichler family included his wife, Lillian, and two sons, Richard and Edward, or Ned. Now 40, Joe was, by all ordinary measures of the day, a highly successful man. Events during the next few years would cause Eichler to start over with an entirely new career. In , Eichler spotted a rare opportunity for his family, and rented a Frank Lloyd Wright Usonian, known as the Bazett House, in Hillsborough from an Air Force pilot who was stationed overseas.
The experience Eichler had living in this house would change his life. Eichler, who had been an admirer of Wright, now gained a deeper appreciation for his architecture.
A house in Greenmeadow, an Eichler development in Palo Alto. In , Eichler Homes sold a home in the Greenmeadows tract to a Black family, and a neighbor complained. Darren Bradley is an architectural photographer and the man behind the popular Instagram account modarchitecture. Eichler responded angrily to their reaction and "went door-to-door personally to confront them and even offered to buy back their homes.
This Claude Oakland—designed, model in Orange advertised that "The parents enjoy complete privacy in the master bedroom suite and direct access to the rear patio. Later, Eichler Homes codified its policy to sell to any qualified homebuyer regardless of race, ethnicity, or religion.
They believed passionately in promoting civil rights, but saw that the best way to do that was to speak in different registers for different audiences. See more of this restored Eichler. The wing on the right of this Eichler was a recent addition. In true Eichler style, the wing keeps the view of the yard framed from the interior and has an open floor plan between the living room and the kitchen.
See more of this Eichler addition. Large glass areas were used to line the indoor atriums, and translucent windows were used for privacy. This image was taken by photographer David Eichler, grandson of Joseph Eichler. Eichler Homes attract a wide range of devotees, including architects, designers and enthusiasts of midcentury style and modern art.
The owners of this Eichler have that same steadfast appreciation, evident in how lovingly they renovated their home with Eichler's brand of modernism in mind.
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