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San Francisco Eichler home renovation restores original details ...
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Joseph Leopold Eichler (June 25, 1900 - July 1, 1974) was a 20th-century post-war American real estate developer known for developing distinctive residential subdivisions of Mid-Century modern style tract housing in California. He was one of the influential advocates of bringing modern architecture from custom residences and large corporate buildings to general public availability. His company and developments remain in the Greater San Francisco Bay Area and Greater Los Angeles.


Video Joseph Eichler



Eichler Homes

Between 1949 and 1966, Joseph Eichler's company, Eichler Homes, built over 11,000 homes in nine communities in Northern California and homes in three communities in Southern California. Later, other firms worked with Eichler's company to build similar houses. Together, they all came to be known as Eichlers. During this period, Eichler became one of the nation's most influential builders of modern homes. The largest contiguous Eichler Homes development is "The Highlands" in San Mateo, built between 1956 and 1964.

Joseph Eichler is considered by some to be a social visionary and commissioned designs primarily for middle-class Americans. One of his stated aims was to construct inclusive and diverse planned communities, ideally featuring integrated parks and community centers. Eichler established a non-discrimination policy and offered homes for sale to anyone of any religion or race. In 1958, he resigned from the National Association of Home Builders when they refused to support a non-discrimination policy.

Design

According to his son, Eichler was inspired by a short period of time when the family lived in a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home in Hillsborough. Eichler was attracted to the style and decided to try to produce similar designs. Joseph Eichler used well-known architects to design both the site plans and the homes themselves. He hired the respected architect and Wright disciple of sorts Robert Anshen of Anshen & Allen to design the initial Eichlers, and the first prototypes were built in 1949. In later years, Eichler built homes that were designed by other architects including by the San Francisco firm Claude Oakland & Associates and the Los Angeles firms of Jones & Emmons, A. Quincy Jones, and Raphael Soriano.

Eichler homes are examples of Modernist architecture that has come to be known as "California Modern", and typically feature glass walls, post-and-beam construction, and open floorplans in a style indebted to Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe. Eichler home exteriors featured flat and/or low-sloping A-framed roofs, vertical 2-inch pattern wood siding, and spartan facades with clean geometric lines. One of Eichler's signature concepts was to "bring the outside in", achieved via skylights and floor-to-ceiling windows with glass transoms looking out on protected and private outdoor rooms, patios, atriums, gardens, and swimming pools. Also of note is that most Eichler homes feature few, if any, front-facing (i.e., street-facing) windows; instead house fronts have either small, ceiling-level windows or small, rectangular windows with frosted glass. Many other architectural designs have large windows on all front-facing rooms.

The interiors had numerous unorthodox and innovative features for the time period including: exposed post-and-beam construction; tongue and groove decking for the ceilings following the roofline; concrete slab floors with integral radiant heating; lauan (Philippine mahogany) paneling; sliding doors for rooms, closets, and cabinets; and typically a second bathroom located in the master bedroom. Later models introduced the distinctive Eichler entry atriums, an open-air, enclosed entrance foyer designed to further advance the concept of integrating outdoor and indoor spaces.

Eichler homes were airy and modern in comparison to most of the mass-produced, middle-class, postwar homes built in the 1950s. At first, potential home buyers, many of whom were war-weary ex-servicemen and women seeking convention rather than innovation, were resistant to the innovative homes.


Maps Joseph Eichler



Projects

The Northern California Eichler Homes are predominantly in San Francisco, Marin County, Sacramento, the East Bay towns of Walnut Creek, Concord, Oakland, Castro Valley, and the San Francisco Peninsula towns of San Mateo, Redwood City, Palo Alto, Sunnyvale, Mountain View and San Jose. The Southern California Eichler Homes developments are in Thousand Oaks, Granada Hills, Orange and Palm Springs.

Eichler Homes neighborhoods

Northern California

Marin County
  • Lucas Valley and Marinwood - Marin County, California
  • The Terra Linda section - San Rafael, California
San Mateo County
  • 19th Avenue Park - San Mateo, California
  • The Highlands - San Mateo, California - with over 700 Eichlers, this is the largest contiguous development of Eichler homes.
  • Bay Vista, Treasure Isle, and Marina Point Neighborhoods - Foster City, California, three separate neighborhoods that are all in close-proximity to each other and feature Eichler homes intermixed with other types of architecture. Bay Vista is the largest tract in Foster City.
  • Mills Estates - Burlingame, California
  • Atherwood - Redwood City, California
Santa Clara County
  • Monta Loma Neighborhood - Mountain View, California with 200 Eichler homes from 1954 in a tract called Fairview, this is also a location with other mid-century home builders, Mackay Homes and Mardell Homes.
  • Stanford University - Stanford, California, about 100 homes on Stanford land north of Page Mill Road and east of Junipero Serra Blvd.
  • Midtown - South Palo Alto Palo Alto, California, with many Eichler Homes, a Swim and Tennis Club called "Eichler" and an Eichler Tract Community Association and Aquatic Facility called "Greenmeadow"
  • Bell Meadows - Mountain View, California, 48 Eichler homes built from 1972-1973 near Trophy Drive
  • Sunnymount Gardens - Sunnyvale, California, the first Eichlers built in 1949-1950.
  • Fairgrove Tract - Cupertino, California has 229 homes built in 1960-1961
  • Fairwood, Fairbrae, and Fairbrae addition - Sunnyvale, California have 400+ homes built between 1958-1961
  • Fairglen Tract in the Willow Glen neighborhood - San Jose, California
  • Morepark Neighborhood (currently called Rose Glen / Sherman Oaks) Willow Glen - San Jose, California
  • Clay Drive - Los Altos, California
  • Pomeroy West - Santa Clara, California, with 138 Eichler homes
Alameda County
  • Sequoyah Hills - Oakland, California, built between 1965-1966, there are fewer than 50 homes in Oakland Hills.
  • Greenridge - Castro Valley, California, built along a ridge in the hills of Castro Valley, there are around 200 homes build by Joseph Eichler in the early to mid 1960s. Designed by Claude Oakland and Jones & Emmons, these homes feature a variety of floor plans from flat-top roofs to steeply pitched A-frames. All the homes feature the signature Eichler atrium along with floor-to-ceiling walls of glass and exposed post and beams. Most Greenridge homes have view with some having views of the east bay city lights and the bay.
Contra Costa County
  • Concord, California - Three Eichler tracts (Rancho Del Diablo, Rancho Los Santos, and Parkwood Estates) consisting of approximately 175 homes built between 1963 and 1964
  • Rancho San Miguel - Walnut Creek, California, a neighborhood with more than 300 Eichler homes
Other Northern California counties
  • South Land Park and South Land Park Hills neighborhoods in Sacramento, California - with many Eichler homes and a street named Eichler Street
  • Diamond Heights neighborhood - San Francisco, California

Southern California

  • "Eichler Homes In Conejo Village" and Expo/West - Thousand Oaks, California, with 103 Eichler homes in the "Eichler Homes In Conejo Village" tract, built between 1964-1966. The newer portion of the development was marketed as Expo/West.
  • Balboa Heights - Granada Hills, California, with 109 Eichler homes in am Eichler community in the San Fernando Valley; it's "Foster Residence" is a designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument
  • Fairhaven - Orange, California, with 140 Eichler homes
  • Fairmeadow - Orange, California, with 123 Eichler homes
  • Fairhills - Orange, California, with 80 Eichler homes
  • Palm Springs, California in the southernmost Andreas Hills neighborhood - building started in 2015 based on Eichler's blueprints, built by KUD Development.

Other projects

Joseph Eichler also built semi-custom designs for individual clients by commission, such as three in Chestnut Ridge, New York. As a result of soaring land prices in the mid-1960s urban redevelopment projects became popular, and Eichler began building low- and high-rise projects in San Francisco's Western Addition and Hunters Point-Bayview districts, luxury high-rises and clustered housing on Russian Hill and Diamond Heights. He also developed the suburban and trendsetting co-op communities Pomeroy Green and Pomeroy West in Santa Clara. These large projects began to overextend the company, and by the mid-1960s, Eichler Homes was in financial distress. The company filed for bankruptcy in 1967.


Joseph Eichler Archives - Archpaper.com - Archpaper.com
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Personal life

He married Lilian Moncharsh (1902-1982), the daughter of Polish Jewish emigres. Together they had two sons, Edward "Ned" Philip (1930-2014) and Richard.


Joseph Eichler - Curbed
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References


Surprising Eichler House Plans For Sale Gallery - Exterior ideas ...
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Sources

  • Adamson, Paul; Marty, Arbunich (2002). Eichler: Modernism Rebuilds the American Dream. Ernest Braun (photographer). Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith Publishers. ISBN 1-58685-184-5. 
  • Adamson, Paul (March 2001). "California modernism and the Eichler homes". The Journal of Architecture. 6 (1): 1-25. doi:10.1080/13602360010024804. 
  • Ditto, Jerry; Lanning, Stern (1995). Design for Living: Eichler Homes. Marvin Wax (photographer). San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN 0-8118-0846-7. 
  • Jacobs, Karrie (May 15, 2005). "Saving the Tract House". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved December 26, 2009. 

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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