Upon my first visit to Palm Springs several years ago I was overwhelmed by the amount of midcentury modern architecture. I am not talking about a city with a handful of iconic structures, but a whole community that embraced a modern style starting in the 1940’s. It also helped that during the ’50’ and ’60’s Palm Springs was the winter playground for celebrities and wealthy people. Many famous people had their winter homes designed with modern themes of the day.
But what truly caught my eye was how the whole modern architectural concept spilled over and was embraced by small commercial buildings, municipal offices, apartments, condominiums and suburban tract houses.Virtually everywhere you look you will see a nod to midcentury modern design concepts.
There are entire books devoted to Palm Springs modern (Palm Springs Weeked, The Architecture and Design of a Midcentury Oasis, Alan Hess and Andrew Danish Chroniclebooks.com, 2001 is excellent), the architects, developers and folks who commissioned the buildings. These are pictures I snapped as I travelled to various hiking destinations. My interest lies more heavily with midcentury design as it was applied to the mass market of everyday people and families. It is one thing to admire the design elements of the fabulous estate, it is another to live in and own a property that strongly echoes those architectural lines you love.
**These pictures were taken a week before Christmas so some of the outdoor decorations are kind of funky. Most of the pictures were taken at street level with a cheap Nikon camera. There maybe too much street asphalt in the photos, but it gives you a better since of how the homes are situated. There are other architectural styles prominent in Palm Springs, most notably original spanish and Tiki themed hotels. Both are neat to see. The magazine Atomic Ranch is also a good source of midcentury modern ranch homes throughout the United States. There is also a map of modern Palm Srings buildings at the Palm Springs visitors center as you enter town.