Pictured: a Gregory Ain Park Planned home in Altadena is featured on the 35th annual Pasadena Heritage home tour.
Pasadena Heritage will highlight Modern residential architecture on its 35th anniversary Spring Home Tour, sponsored by Deasy/Penner & Partners and co-sponsored by The Capital Group Charitable Foundation, Kelly Sutherlin McLeod Architecture, Inc., Pasadena Convention and Visitors Bureau and Meyler & Company Locations. Though more rare in Pasadena, wonderful examples of these hidden gems can be found scattered throughout the city. Featured homes were designed by local graduates and teachers from the School of Architecture, University of Southern California and by architects trained elsewhere.
The Buff, Straub & Hensman-designed Thomson house, featured on this year’s tour, is one of the great examples of the USC Style of architecture. This house is of post-and-beam construction and beautifully blends outdoor and indoor spaces with the use of patios and glass. Other featured homes will include the deSteiguer House designed by Harwell Hamilton Harris in 1936 and moved to its current location by Leland Evison in 1951. Harris and Evison both have ties to USC. Harris was a lecturer in the 1940s and Evison attended USC in the 1920s. Both the Thomson House and deSteiguer House are part of the Poppy Peak historic district that has recently been added to the National Register of Historic Places. Also on the tour will be a Park Planned Homes designed by Gregory Ain in 1947-1948 in neighboring Altadena. It is part of a unique grouping of mirror-image homes that comprise a single residential block. Ain also taught at USC from 1949 – 1960.
Also featured are homes designed by architects who received their degrees outside of California contrast to the USC Style. Harold Zook and John Galbraith received architectural degrees from Cornell University and the University of Washington, Seattle, respectively. Harold Zook’s 1951 home makes wonderful use of glass that seamlessly merges the house and landscape with access to the outdoors from every room in the house. The Cox House, designed by Galbraith in 1959, is a wonderful example of Southern California’s indigenous Modernism that combines the European International Style with natural materials to create a specific regional architecture.
Tour houses will be open on Sunday, March 25th from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Visitors drive themselves to the five homes where trained docents will relate information about the architect, the homes, and their original owners.
Purchase your tickets online at pasadenaheritage.org or call (626) 441-6333. To order tickets by mail, please send a check payable to Pasadena Heritage, 651 South St. John Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91105.
Pasadena Heritage presents:
2012 Spring Home Tour - American Modern: USC Style and Beyond
A drive-yourself tour of 5 mid-century homes designed by noted architects
Sunday, March 25, 2012
9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Advance Tickets:
Pasadena Heritage Member Price: $35
General Public: $40
Day of Event Tickets: $42