Lamolithic house

Lamolithic house was the term given by Sarasota concrete businessman John Lambie to describe his unique method of building modern reinforced concrete residential structures. This building technique enabled the fabrication of thin ceiling and wall planes, thus enabling architects to draft efficient and lightweight designs. Several historic lamolithic houses were constructed by renowned architects Paul Rudolph and Ralph Twitchell (among others) on Siesta Key, Florida using this technique.[1] These homes were among the earliest examples of reinforced concrete residential construction.[2]

Lamolithic house
Lamolithic House Construction View
Paul Rudolph, Architect.
TypeExperimental design:
Modern homes with cast-in-place lightweight reinforced concrete roof and wall structure
LocationSiesta Key, Florida
Coordinates27°16′09″N 82°33′18″W
Built1939-1960
Architectural style(s)Modern architecture
Sarasota School of Architecture
Lamolithic house is located in Florida
Lamolithic house
Location of Lamolithic house in Florida
Lamolithic house is located in the United States
Lamolithic house
Lamolithic house (the United States)

New architectural concepts in Sarasota

Beginning in the 1940s, the modern movement known as the Sarasota School of Architecture was challenging pre-conceived notions of residential design. It proposed a radical new approach to the concept of the home; minimalist geometry, virtually no interior and few exterior walls, razor-thin flat roof. Extensive use of glass. Although this ‘open-plan’ idea had initially been realized by Mies van der Rohe with his Barcelona Pavilion and by Frank Lloyd Wright with his concrete-work at Florida Southern College and Fallingwater, architects Rudolph and Twitchell were developing conceptual plans for entire neighborhoods consisting of flat concrete roof and wall planes to be built as a speculative development on Siesta Key.[3]

Concrete had the potential to be a viable, economic solution to new construction; resistant to moisture, termites and hurricanes. It permitted virtually unlimited freedom in spatial configuration. It represented the future of modern architectural design.[4][5][6]

The first lamolithic houses

Revere Quality Institute House
Paul Rudolph, Architect

Twitchell had known and worked with local concrete supplier, John E. Lambie for many years. Lambie, having worked with the progressive architects in the area, was somewhat experienced in developing new ways to utilize concrete in construction. In fact, Lambie had constructed homes with reinforced concrete for Twitchell before, dating as far back as 1939, for the Andrews House (Twitchell's secretary), as well as the Twitchell Residence.[7][8]

The notion of forming a complete roof in place on a series of thin, steel perimeter poles was put to the test in a prototype building. The Revere Quality House was an experimental joint venture of Lambie's new Lamolithic Industries, Revere Copper Company, Architectural Forum magazine, and Twitchell / Rudolph Architects. Its mission was to promote the construction of quality, affordable houses that featured bold designs.[9][10]

Utilizing reusable steel forms and mobile concrete mixing machines, Lambie successfully built the house entirely of concrete. To achieve the thin ceiling profile, narrow steel beams were incorporated to provide tensile strength. Lambie also pioneered an innovative passive environmental design into the roof, incorporating a thin crushed layer of shells to hold moisture. As the water evaporated, a cooling effect permeated into the home below.[11][12]

When the Revere House was opened for tours in 1948, more than 16,000 people visited it in the first year. It was featured in Architectural Forum (October 1948),[13] Architectural Review (November 1948),[14] and House and Garden (August 1949).[15] It was advertised regularly in the Saturday Evening Post.[16]

The Revere Quality Institute House is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[17][18]

Lamolithic houses of Siesta Key

Lamolithic House Site Plan
Paul Rudolph, Architect.

Simultaneously, Rudolph, Twitchell, and Lambie were already underway with the construction of a complex consisting of several lamolithic houses on the other side of Siesta Key, across the street from the famed Siesta Beach. This was Rudolph's first opportunity to experiment with a more urban design approach. The compact site encompassed four housing units with shared lamolithic privacy walls, defining inner and outer space, as well as private and public space. Despite its small footprint, Rudolph was able to create the illusion of expanded volume by staggering the open-plan structures on the site.[19][20]

The original Rudolph design incorporated five units, but only four were completed.[21]

Reinforced concrete construction proved to be very expensive to build. When architect and former employee of Twitchell, Jack West, was interviewed in 1994, he said that the original $14,000 budget for the Revere House doubled to $28,000 by the time the house was completed. From that point forward, large-scale poured-in-place structural concrete construction was no longer used for the vast majority of homes in Florida.[22]

Lamolithic house design and construction

Sources: U.S. Library of Congress and State Library and Archive of Florida

References

  1. Rudolph, Paul. "Lamolithic Development - Paul Rudolph". Paul Rudolph and his Architecture. University of Massachusetts Dartmouth.
  2. Howey, John (1995). The Sarasota School of Architecture: 1941 - 1966. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0262082402.
  3. King, Joseph and Domin, Christopher (February 1, 2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 248. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Hochstim, Jan (2005). Florida Modern : Residential Architecture 1945-1970. Rizzoli New York. p. 145. ISBN 978-0847826032.
  5. "Sarasota School: The Early Years". Florida Archinology. Archinology.
  6. Branch, Mark Alden (June 2003). "Rudolph Revisited" (PDF). Architecture Journal. AJA Canada.
  7. Weaving, Andrew (2006). Sarasota Modern. Rizzoli New York. ISBN 9780847828722.
  8. Rice, Patty Jo (1992). Interpreting Moods In Sticks, Stones, and Sunshine: The Life and Architecture of Ralph Twitchell. University of South Florida. p. 324.
  9. Berger, Christopher (2010). Historic Preservation and the Sarasota School of Architecture: Three Case Studies (Masters Thesis). Gainesville, FL: University of Florida.
  10. McClintock, Mike (January 1989). Alternative Housebuilding. Sterling Publishing. p. 384. ISBN 978-0806969954.
  11. Strang, Max (2018). "Lessons of resiliency from Sarasota School of Architecture". Building Beyond Together.
  12. Kanter, Aviel (March 2017). "Contemporary Reverie". SRQ Magazine. SRQ Magazine.
  13. Morgan, Rodney McCay (October 1948). "Concrete home in Florida is one of eight prototype houses to solve regional building problems". Architectural Forum. Architectural Forum.
  14. "House In Florida: R.S. Twitchel and P.M. Rudolph". Architectural Review. ArchitecturaL Review. June 1949.
  15. "Four Houses: Cost $18,400 This House Won First Prize In The South". House and Garden. House and Garden. August 1949.
  16. "Paul Marvin Rudolph". USModernist. Modernist Archive Inc.
  17. Revere Quality Institute House (U.S. National Register of Historic Places). 2013–2017. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  18. "Revere Quality Institute House". Sarasota History Alive. City of Sarasota.
  19. King, Joseph and Domin, Christopher (February 1, 2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 248. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  20. "The Architectural Flavor: Paul Rudolph". Sarasota Bay Real Estate. 9 October 2013.
  21. "For Sale: Lamolithic House on Siesta Key". Sarasota Magazine. Sarasota Magazine. August 7, 2015.
  22. Howey, John (1994). The Sarasota School of Architecture (Interview with Jack West). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 195. ISBN 978-0262581561.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.