
Bungalow Architecture + Design
Friends and followers will no doubt have noticed the absence of posts this past year, and our quietness regarding the renovation of Cambria. You may recall that our long awaited, much anticipated, and highly researched new windows and doors were about to be installed; we were tweeting and sharing pictures, and very much enjoying seeing the changes it made...

Midcentury Property: What’s Our Type?
Can you help us identify the typeface used in the signage for our house, “CAMBRIA”? As font fiends and typography fans, we’re sorry to say that we’re stumped with this one. Curiously, it very strongly resembles the typeface used for the signage on Grade-II listed Farnley Hey, and we’re very interested to see if there’s...

A Tale of Two Bungalows
Here’s a short tale of two bungalows – both midcentury modern architectural gems, both having reached varying degrees of disrepair, and with interesting common features to their form and situation despite being an ocean apart. One has a compelling before and after story already told… the other’s: still to tell. Bungalow #1, Architect: Arthur Witthoefft...

People In Glass Houses
We continue our Eichler theme here on the Journal with a superb trailer for a very exciting documentary project by California realtor, Monique Lombardelli: “People In Glass Houses – The Legacy Of Joseph Eichler”. Monique became a true Eichler fan when driving along the streets of Sunnyvale for this first time back in 2009 and...

Eichler Experimental: The X-100
Joseph L. Eichler (1900–1974) was a renowned homebuilder, responsible for a number of keystone midcentury-modern developments, or tracts, across California’s Bay Area between 1951–1964, totalling around 11,000 homes in all. Single storey properties, save around 50 or so, these homes were of trademark timber post and beam construction, with soaring flat or gently pitched roofs....

Finding Cambria
As much as we loved our Californian-style ‘midmod’ bungalow, we both knew it was time to move on. Cravings for more space, a change of scene… and the thought of a new quirky property challenge were keeping us increasingly wired in to Rightmove and Primelocation, scouring the country from top to bottom and checking out...

The Renway Type 60A Bungalow
Situated at the heart of Renway’s award-winning Edgcumbe Park Development, 5 Heathermount Drive occupies one of the most commanding plots. One of only ten remaining Type 60/60A bungalows, this modern ‘Ranch-style’ design with its asymmetric roof, picture windows and open-plan living takes clear cues from mid-century Californian homebuilders such as the renowned Joseph Eichler. A...

Remodelling the Bungalow
Excitement and trepidation in equal measure, we received the keys to the bungalow on 14th September 2007 armed with energy, vision, and a bulging scrapbook of ideas, samples and sketches, eager to breathe life back into this tired, neglected gem! We set to work immediately removing fixtures, fittings, layers upon layers of wallpaper, out-of-keeping decorative...

Renway: Banning the British Box
From the Edgcumbe Park archives, the original Renway Sales Advertisements as placed in the Times, the Observer, Daily & Sunday Telegraph, airline gazettes and others as shown. Wonderful language and descriptions helped add extra panache to entice buyers: ‘unashamed class’ and ‘houses for the go-ahead… and arrived’ and to add to Renway’s ‘campaign against conformity.’...

Edgcumbe Park: A Midcentury Development of the Future
Founded in 1955 by Athelstan Whaley, the Renway Construction Company produced a small number of housing developments in the South East of England driven by a passion for quality of construction, innovative design and customer satisfaction. A small, family owned business, it created around 30 homes per year over its 40 year span, remaining little-known...

Foreword
Welcome to our new Journal! We’re really excited to have a new place to collect our thoughts and things that inspire us. In particular, we’ve been itching to have somewhere to put all our property thoughts and architecture/design/style inspirations, much of which wouldn’t sit properly on our business blog — and really required a different...