By Mildred
F. Schmertz, FAIA
ARCHITECTURAL RECORD
It is not widely known, except among New
England’s architectural
preservationists, that a collection of little Modernist summer
houses built of wood lies within the boundaries of the Cape Cod
National Seashore. At the end of World War II, on the stretch of
land between Truro and Wellfleet on the Outer Cape, leading international
architects Marcel Breuer, Serge Chermayeff, and the Boston architects
Nathaniel Saltonstall and Oliver Morton began building thoughtful
and inventive Modernist houses for themselves and clients. Other
good, if less-well-known New England architects began to do the
same. There are at least 20 of these houses still extant; more,
if the criteria for determining aesthetic and historic importance
are not too rigorous. For several reasons, these houses are an
endangered species, but they are not without friends, including
most importantly the Massachusetts Historic Commission and DOCOMOMO,
the international organization dedicated to the study and preservation
of the built legacy of the Modern movement.
The Cape Cod National Seashore was created by legislation
sponsored by President John F. Kennedy and signed into law in
August 1961. The Atlantic-facing outer beach, known locally as
the “back
shore,” runs northward unobstructed 40-miles or so from Chatham
all the way to Provincetown. Then, heading south, the national
Seashore follows Cape Cod Bay. The park owns little on the bay
side, with the exception of a portion of Wellfleet. Between Truro
and Wellfleet it connects the ocean side to the bay side. The park
comprises 27 thousand land acres that include beautiful beaches
and back woodland roads and trails that are for the most part open
to the public.
September 1959 was the cutoff date for all new construction within
what were to become the park boundaries. Up to then, about 600
homes on privately owned land had been built. Those who built between
1959 and 1961 were forced to sell their property back to the park.
The government offered sellers the option of taking less money
in exchange for a 25-year lease; once the lease was up, the property
would return to park control.
What makes these 44-year-old public/private environmental and
recreational arrangements of interest today is their effect on
preservation issues. All but three of the 20-odd houses are privately
owned and at risk of being sold as teardowns because of the ever-increasing
value of the land they occupy. The exceptions include the Thomas
Kuhn Cottage designed by Saltonstall and Morton and the Hatch Cottage
by Jack Hall. Both were built after the cutoff and are owned, therefore,
by the National Seashore. A former wife of the late Paul Weidlinger,
one of the most distinguished structural engineers of his day,
donated the third residence to the park.
The preservation story of these three houses is at present
one of partial success, and it begins with the efforts of preservationist
Gina Coyle with the aid of DOCOMOMO. Coyle’s transformation
from a year-round house sitter to a leading advocate for the continuous
existence of three small Modernist houses on the Outer Cape began
when she was asked by Sarah Kuhn to look after her late grandparents’ house.
Its ownership had outlived the 25-year lease option but Kuhn continued
to occupy the house in the summertime on a yearly lease basis.
This arrangement had become more and more untenable because she
did not wish to continue to maintain a house that she believed
would be torn down once the National Park Service (NPS) laid claim
to it. By the time Coyle began to live there, if was in serious
disrepair, and it was then that Kuhn chose not to renew the lease
and was told to vacate.
Though it leaked and sagged, Coyle had come to love the house
for its economy, simplicity, and carefully studied relationship
with the surrounding wooded landscape, so she set out to persuade
the NPS, under its ownership, to repair and preserve the house
for an appropriate use she had in mind. To further her case, she
made a survey of 20 Modernist cottages on the National Seashore
and documented them to demonstrate that the Kuhn property was not
a singular phenomenon but a very important segment of New England’s
architectural culture. And she extended her fight to include the
Hatch and Weidlinger houses as well.
Bill Burke, the National Seashore’s historian, admits that
in spite of Coyle’s efforts, he and his colleagues initially
believed the three houses were not historically significant. “But
we consulted with the Massachusetts Historical Commission as we
are required to do by law before we tear anything down,” he
says. “The Commission told us that we were wrong; the houses
were indeed of historic importance, and they had their reasons.” It
became the NPS’s responsibility to take care of the three
houses and, for their protection, keep them occupied.
Today, the Kuhn house has a new rubber-membrane roof and is
used in the summer as a residence for graduate students doing
scientific work in the park. Ruth Hatch still leases here house
from the National Seashore on a yearly basis and will be allowed
to live there every summer for as long as she wishes. “When the time comes,” explains
Burke, “the immediate concern for the Hatch house will be
to keep it well maintained and occupied during the summer months.
The park is certainly open to the options of an individual lease,
or for a nonprofit use of the house.” Burke reports, however,
that plans for the Weidlinger house are still uncertain, as it
has major maintenance needs that the NPS must yet address.
While it is clear that the National Seashore can and will
protect the historic houses it owns, the privately owned houses
remain endangered. David Fixler, AIA, president of DOCOMOMO US/New
England explains: “The problem is what real estate is worth now.
Some of these houses were built for $5,000 when the land was worth
$500. Multiply all that basically by a factor of one thousand.
Let us say a little one-room Modernist cottage sells for $750,000.
Anyone who has spent that much money on a house doesn’t want
it to stay a little one-room cottage, so this is the dilemma we
are facing.” DOCOMOMO has studied possible strategies, including
the creation of historic districts. Unfortunately, as Fixler points
out, these houses are not clustered and, in fact, are totally unconnected: “It
takes the better part of a day,” he notes, “To drive
from one to another because of the narrow dirt roads. When you
are in any one of these houses there is no immediate physical sense
of the presence of others.”
Fixler has come to believe that the best guarantee for any
kind of preservation is strong local support. It is more important,
he claims, than a National Register or State Register approval.
And it helps if the house was designed by an architect of the stature
of Breuer or Chermayeff, can honestly be deemed a truly significant
work of mid-20th-century Modernist architecture, and given landmark
status on its own. And sometimes a completely unprotected iconic
Modernist home can be saved even after it is purchased for a teardown. Fixler
cites a house by TAC in Newton, Massachusetts. When the new owners
applied for a permit to demolish the house, Fixler relates, the
city of Newton sat up and told them they could not do it, used
and existing demolition delay ruling to slow them down, and gathered
public support to successfully save the house.
Fixler advises preservationists to bring all the ammunition
they can. “You may not have an ironclad legal case,” he
points out, “but sometimes there is just enough local incentive
and local pressure so that people realize it is just not in their
interest to tear the thing down. But there is not hard-and-fast
approach.” Fixler believes strongly that Modernist houses
should not be treated as static works of architecture, and if you
buy one you don’t have to correctly restore it as you would
an Early American house. He argues that it is essential to convince
buyers that it is possible to double the size of a house while
making it appear to be exactly what it exactly is, a recognizable
piece of its original architectural era with contemporary additions. “If
you can’t do that with these houses, then they are toast,” Fixler
warns. “Given the land values, people are going to want a
house that they can make a little more luxurious. People think
we preservationists are saying you must keep an architecturally
historic house the way it is. This is a peculiar notion that we
must disabuse ourselves of.” And the sooner the better if
the public is to learn how amenable to enlargement these mid-20th-century
Modernist houses can be made to be.
Originally published in Architectural Record August 2005
Mildred
F. Schmertz, FAIA, is a former editor in chief of ARCHITECTURAL
RECORD
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