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The Florida Home |
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Modern
Living
1945-1965
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During the two decades following World War II, population growth and
an expanding economy transformed the landscape of Florida. Extensive migration
from other states, new highways, the rise of jet aviation, the reinvigoration
of tourism and increasing investment in military installations propelled
a far-reaching boom.
The hundreds of thousands of people who settled in Florida sought housing,
particularly new homes in the suburban areas of the state's metropolitan
regions. Rising incomes, low-interest government loans and efficiencies
in the building industry all contributed to the construction of an unprecedented
number of houses. Architectural styles reflected the postwar generation's
desire for modern homes-homes that expressed the optimistic, future-oriented
mood of the times and that offered interlocking spaces and furnishings
for comfortable living.
In the Miami metropolitan area, the focus of this exhibition, architects
adapted
modernist design concepts and technologies to a sub-tropical environment
to create houses uniquely suited to South Florida lifestyles. They employed
vast glass and screened walls that revolutionized the surfaces of houses
and produced unparalleled openness to the environment. At the same time,
they aspired to a spirit of authenticity that was rooted in the ideas
of the region's early naturalists. Although their houses were often radically
innovative in composition, architects followed vernacular building strategies
and used locally available types of wood, concrete and masonry. The result
was a new type of home that redefined the boundary between indoors and
outdoors. This embrace and celebration of the tropical environment constitute
the most vital and original contribution of South Florida architects to
postwar housing.
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Designing
the South Florida Modern Home |
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There was ample precedent for the development of the tropical home in
postwar South Florida. Porches for living and sleeping, walled patios,
terraces, balconies, habitable roof decks, loggias, verandas and exterior
stairways were all elements characteristic of the region's earlier architectural
styles: the traditional wood vernacular, Mediterranean Revival and the
"Art Deco" modern of the 1930s. Outdoor-oriented spaces were
the building blocks of a distinct South Florida residential architecture,
which postwar architects pursued in new ways. South Florida architects
were also influenced by national architectural trends, such as the Case
Study Houses-affordable modern homes designed by leading architects between
1945 and 1966 for the Los Angeles area.
For South Floridians, the tropical home was a vehicle for creating a
domestic utopia: a world in which families fantasized of unfettered contact
with the warm, lush environment. This environment, however, also posed
many challenges: annoying insects, intense sun, frequent rain and overwhelming
humidity. In providing shelter and protection, South Florida architects
employed raised floors, overhanging eaves and cross ventilation, while
experimenting with continuities in indoor and outdoor spaces. Narrow rooms,
shed roofs and large louvered windows helped to move breezes through houses.
The most conspicuous feature of the tropical home was the expansive screened
porch or "Florida Room." These all-purpose outdoor living spaces
became more affordable with technological advancements, including "Lumite"
plastic screening (instead of wire mesh) and lightweight wood or aluminum
frames. Although Miami's ubiquitous grid of streets ran north-south and
east-west, Florida Rooms were often oriented southeast for maximum exposure
to trade winds.
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Postwar
Miami Architects |
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Igor Polevitzky, Rufus Nims and Alfred Browning Parker were leaders of
a Miami version of the national "modern is regional" movement
that emerged in the early 1940s. Like Ralph Twitchell and Paul Rudolph
in the Tampa Bay area, Polevitzky, Nims and Parker defined the paradigms
of the modern tropical house before the widespread use of central air-conditioning.
Their works were published in national architectural journals and in such
magazines as House and Garden, House Beautiful and House
& Home. Polevitzky was particularly concerned with spatial elements
suitable to the tropics: patios, porches, terraces and raised galleries.
Nims combined respect for Florida vernacular architectural traditions
with experimentation in building materials, construction technologies
and house structures. Of the three, Parker was the most inspired by Frank
Lloyd Wright's postwar "organic" architecture, with its emphasis
on horizontal spaces and projecting roofs that connected with nature.
Among the other important Miami architects of the period were Norman
Giller, Russell Pancoast, Lester Pancoast, Robert Bradford Browne, Robert
Little, George Reed, Wahl Snyder and Kenneth Treister. Their works ranged
from low-cost housing projects to luxurious homes. Two prominent prewar
architects remained active during the postwar era: Robert Law Weed, who
had designed a "Florida Tropical Home" for the 1933 Century
of Progress exposition in Chicago, and Marion Manley, the second registered
female architect in Florida. Weed and Manley participated in the design
of the modernist campus of the University of Miami. Beyond Miami, tropical
modern homes were built by such architects as Chuck Reed and Robert Hansen
in Ft. Lauderdale.
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South
Floridas Modern Houses |
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Imported from Europe, the 1930s "International Style" house-made
of glass, white walls and flat roofs-was never popular in the U.S., although
a significant number were built in Miami Beach. Modernism's survival was
based on architects' ability to propose less threatening options for the
middle-income family. Spurred by Frank Lloyd Wright, the search for a
new vernacular modern home accelerated after World War II. The modern
became regional, with houses less rigid in design than the International
Style and closer to the public's desires. White walls and glass boxes
were no longer the exclusive image of modernity. The warmth of brick,
stone and wood could also be modern, as could sloped roofs and courtyards.
Glass remained popular but was often screened by awnings, overhangs and
louvers, or incorporated in sliding doors.
After World War II, South Florida architects created a new type of modern
house. They conceived of their houses as experiments and took great pride
in solving specific problems related to living in a tropical environment.
Paradoxically, South Florida's outdoor living ideal reached its apex during
the 1950s, a period that corresponded with the integration of air-conditioning
into the house. In an age defined by technological mastery of comfort,
openness to the outdoors and natural breezes was a deliberate choice in
lifestyle and
aesthetics. With the development of cheaper central air-conditioning during
the 1960s, however, the embrace of South Florida's tropical environment
declined in favor of the sealed box which, whatever its style, continues
to dominate residential architecture at the beginning of the twenty-first
century.
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