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A Brief Recap of Historical American Home Design

A Brief Recap of Historical American Home Design - As described by Vincent Scully, Jr., in his book American Architecture and Urbanism, a defining characteristic of the American built landscape has been the tension between two competing forces. While the seemingly limitless natural landscape created a desire to keep moving, to find out what was beyond that forest and over that hill, a countervailing longing to stay rooted in one spot also took hold. Our built environment has been an outward expression of our anxiety about leaving the safety, security and familiarity of home when we can't help but follow the dictum "Go West, young man."


This duality has been expressed in many ways in the design of our homes. From an emphasis on horizontal continuity anchored by a vertical totem to our fascination with the RV (even if it's tethered to a parking space), we want the illusion that we can get up and move at any time while having the security of being connected and fixed to a home. It's not surprising that our national pastime is baseball, the one sport where scoring is achieved solely by leaving and then returning home.

So let's take a look at how American home design has expressed and attempted to resolve this tension — and what might happen when the realization hits that the trend of expansion is changing.
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