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Other Modernist Houses in the Fayetteville Area |
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1937 - The Deal-Greene House, 1610 Brookside Avenue, Fayetteville. Sold to Albert Cicero Greene and Aliene Swinson Greene. Architect unknown. According to Dan MacMillan, there was no architect.
1938 - The J. Bernard and Herlyn Yalovitz Stein House, 105 Dobbin Road, Fayetteville. They ran the largest department store in town. Architect unknown, but the original owner's daughter, Marcia Stein Schur, recalls he was out of New York. Dan MacMillan's firm did an addition to the rear, a dressing room. Still occupied by the Stein family.
1946 - The Harold K. and Bernice Cohen House, 719 Kooler Circle, Fayetteville. Sold in the 1950's to H. F. Tyler. Sold to Daniel Mussington. Architect unknown.
1948 - The Morgan House, 2853 Skye Drive, Fayetteville NC. Has changed hands several times. Architect unknown. Current owner is Edward T. Parks. Photo by Ericka Giroux.
1950 - The Thomas D. and Ann Hatcher House, 2101 Raeford Road, Fayetteville. Designed by Lt. Colonel William (Bill) Saunders, former post engineer for Fort Bragg in the 1940's. The cost to build Saunder's plan was twice their budget, so they turned to a builder in Lillington, a Mr. Turlington. He redesigned the house and then built it. Around 1986, Dan MacMillan did an addition. Photos by Ericka Giroux.
1951 - The Harry and Fannie Satisky House, 219 Devane, Fayetteville. Designed by Lt. Colonel Willam (Bill) Saunders, former post engineer for Fort Bragg in the 1940's.
1954 - The Lupe and Fred Costilla House, 709 Weldon Avenue, Fayetteville. Attributed to architect Dudley Maxwell, who graduated from West Point and was, according to Dan MacMillan, a "plan drawer" for many years.
1956 - The James H. Taylor, Jr. House, 327 Fairfield Road, Fayetteville. Architect unknown.
1957 - The Dewey T. and Sudie T. Edwards House,
1605 Twin Oaks Drive, Fayetteville.
1957 - The Louise and Stephen Rodgers House, 1866 Broadell Street, Fayetteville. Architect unknown. One of the few NC Modernist houses of that era designed for black owners. Sold to current owner Henry M. Colvin, Jr.
1960 - The Arnetha and Richard P. Robinson House, 1862 Broadell Drive, Fayetteville. Architect unknown. One of the few NC Modernist houses of that era designed for black owners. The Robinsons were faculty at nearby Fayetteville State University. Built for current owners.
1960 - The James R. and Freda B. Johnson House, 1804 Lakeshore, Fayetteville. Johnson was a Georgia Tech-trained civil engineer and designed his own house.
1964 - The F. Sidney and Cornelia Gardner House, 2705 Millbrook Road, Fayetteville. According to the Gardners, they chose it from a plan book and also visited a built version in Weaverville NC. Current owner Honi Gluck.
1964 - The Crowell and Joan Daniel House,
1914 Winterlochen, Fayetteville.
1964 - The Margaret and Henry Capps House, 2425 Morganton Road, Fayetteville. Architect unknown.
1973 - The William N. and Dorothy M. McCormick House, 432 McKinnon Lane, St. Pauls NC. 2694 sf. Built by the original owners starting in 1970. 5 acres. According to their son, Stuart McCormick, "They started out with a typical story & a half ranch-style plan torn from the back of Progressive Farmer magazine and asked my second cousin, Warren McCormick, a student at NCSU School of Design at the time, to do some modifications. As the idealistic design student, Warren convinced them they did not want that plan / style after all and directed them to look at some recently constructed contemporary houses in Raleigh / Chapel Hill. Whatever he did worked and my parents embarked on designing a completely original house for them. My father cut pines from our family land and hauled them to the sawmill where they were sawn into actual 2x framing lumber. He constructed a pole barn on the edge of the property to store and air dry the lumber for a year prior to construction. He also cut cypress from the swamps on the land for the random width board and batten cladding. The screen porch / carport wing extending out the rear, originally had a flat roof, but he changed it to a matching hipped roof when he re-roofed the house c. 1984. At the time of design I was 8-10 years old and I remember attending the design meeting with my parents and seeing my cousin sketch as well as helping out with construction." For sale in 2010.
1973 -
2857 Skye Drive, Fayetteville NC.
Architect unknown. |
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Sources include:
Mason Hicks,
Dan MacMillan,
Brian Shawcroft,
MdM Consultants,
2009 Fayetteville Modern Architecture Survey
Report
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