Cliff May — Father of the modern day ranch house
After our initial discovery of 8 historical plans inspired by Cliff May and now available on houseplans.com, Daniel Gregory, Ph.D., editor-in-chief, was kind enough to connect me with one of the Cliff May inspired home designers — Steven Murphy. Steven was more than happy to “talk shop” with me — as well as compare his Cliff May inspired plan with an original Cliff May designed home. Read on for a virtual tour of Steven’s design, his thoughts on Cliff May and why he’ll forever be an advocate for ranch style homes.
Steven writes:
I have to preface that my appreciation for Cliff May sprang from an intense interest in the West Coast Regionalist Movement that was in full swing as I was growing up in Monterey, California, in the 1960’s. I became aware of architecture at an early age, mostly through the pages of trade and shelter magazines of the day. At that time, these publications ran a lot of stories on the Bay Area, Pacific Northwest and the Southern California Schools of architecture , the latter of which Cliff May was a major proponent. It was here that I first saw photos of Mandalay, Cliff’s own magnificent house in Los Angeles, and the work of his contemporaries, A. Quincy Jones, Harwell Harris, John Lautner, Joseph Esherick, William Wurster, Roland Terry and John Yeon. All of these guys, if you’re not completely familiar with them, are worthy of their own mini-blogs, especially the latter two, Terry and Yeon. Their collective body of work includes some of the most beautiful houses ever created, the likes of which we’ll never see again…
I really began to zero in on May’s work when I bought an original hard cover issue of his 1958 book,Western Ranch Houses by Cliff May, when I was 13. I loved everything about his houses, the roof (I always look at that aspect of a house first), the way they sprawled all over the site, the indoor/outdoor connection, the use of materials, texture and the quality of light and space. Best of all, no matter how Large they were, the scale was always human and appropriate. And, like Frank Lloyd Wright’s houses, they looked like they grew out of the landscape. In fact, the landscape was a very integral part of a Cliff May house and its overall design scheme. He knew how critical this element was and worked closely with the best landscape architects of the day, Thomas Church, Douglas Baylis and Garrett Eckbo. These were completely integrated environments, utterly seamless.
There’s a certain unmistakable quality about the great custom houses built in the 20 years after World War II. To understand what it was, you just have to look through the pages of House Beautiful and House & Garden of the period, especially the Hallmark and Pacesetter houses. There’s an aesthetic sensibility and refinement that you don’t see today, an attention to detail and exuberance that is gone. Maybe it was the bright promise of the future that they embodied, they definitely reflected their times. Also, building codes were nonexistent by today’s standards, you built whatever you could dream up and the land was plentiful and cheap. A great combination of factors that encouraged uber creativity.
My Cliff May inspired design (544-1) on the Houseplans site began life as a prototype for houses I hope to eventually build for myself and others. There are actually 8 different versions of it, ranging in size from about 1,400 square feet, to the 3000 foot version you see on the site. There’s a cult following for Cliff’s houses in LA and most go for multi-millions.
I knew I wanted to live in a similar house, so I designed a 21st century version of one that could be built for a reasonable price. The house is actually an amalgam of Cliff May, Quincy Jones and Harwell Harris, although it’s most reminiscent of May. I incorporated all of my favorite devices into the house, slab foundation, seamless indoor/outdoor flow, skylight at the ridge, walls of glass, sheltering roof, multi fireplaces, integrated gardens, beautiful materials and lots of texture. And, most importantly, an element of surprise like a good Japanese house!
I’ve always felt that the ranch house model was the perfect solution for living in the west. Unfortunately, the form died because land value killed it for average home buyers. I wanted to design a ranch house for a new age, one that respects the aesthetics, scale, proportions and sensibilities of the past, while embracing the realities of modern day life and the new technologies that accompany it. California has some of the strictest building codes in the country and most of Cliff’s houses could not be built today thanks to Title 24 and others. To that end, my house differs in many way from the original.
544-1 is steel frame, post and beam construction with a standing seam metal roof. Most of Cliff’s houses were built of wood and stucco with a tile or shake roof. 544-1 is designed to be built to the highest levels of LEED certification and has the large open plan most buyers want today. In Cliff’s day, fuel was cheap and you could run the AC and radiant heat 365 days a year if you wanted to. And all those walls of glass, not a dual pane in sight! Unlike the original prototype, 544-1 has a fairly compact footprint, especially in the smaller versions, it’s essentially a rectangle. With land to spread out at a premium, the ranch house can no longer ramble quite as much as it did in the day. Ultimately, I’d like the ranch house to live again and I’ll be its loudest advocate forever.
Interestingly, I read on your blog some comments from folks looking at the Eichler essay. The writer said she loved the concept, but didn’t feel it was appropriate for the north. I’m sure you know that Cliff May designed houses in 49 states and myriad foreign countries over the course of his career. In fact, in Dan Gregory’s wonderful Rizzoli book on Cliff, there are photos of a snowbound May house in Switzerland! Also, in the 1958 book, there are great photos of a house in Missouri, with Edward wormley interiors. The text goes into some detail about the radiant heated driveway and atrium that can be used throughout the year. That’s the wonderful thing about these houses, they are infinitely adaptable.
Cliff was a master for sure, I’ve been through a number of his original houses in Sullivan Canyon and they are amazing.
Wow Steven, this home plan has it all — even a guest bedroom/office separate from the main house. I think living in your Cliff May inspired home — whatever the square footage may be — would be like a slice of heaven. I agree with you that the ranch style house is the ultimate solution for living — not only in the west — but throughout the country. Ranch style homes are easy to maintain and live in. With their lack of stairs and mostly single floor living, they allow the owners to “age in place” — which when combined with the general love most owners have for them — is why so many ranch houses retain the original owner.
Mega thanks to Steven for sharing the details about his home plan and inspirations with all of us on Retro Renovation. Steven — hopefully you’ll be breaking ground on a 544-1 plan in the near future.
See all our stories about historic mid century house plans available again for sale today.
Samantha Anastasiou says
oh, i just looked on the houseplans site and it’s got the square footage on there! a bit over 3,000! my home is 2,000….
Samantha Anastasiou says
hi,
and the square feet of the garage too, plus the size of the pool and lot! thanks! i am looking at remodeling my ranch! it is similar to this! many thanks!
Samantha Anastasiou says
hello,
how many square feet is this plan?
blair kooistra says
The indoor/outdoor interface is pure Cliff May, but I see this with many other designers of the period. The bulk of the house in a rectangle seems less May-like to me than the designs of others, although it could pass for a much larger, amped-up May design from the era of his tract home association with Chris Choate, when he pulled in those sprawling bedroom and “motor court” wings to fit more modest homes on smaller lots.
A wonderful plan. I just can’t understand why builders don’t offer homes like this anymore? I’d love to see a development of modest (under 2400 sq foot) mid-century inspired homes with true indoor/outdoor living space, open interior plan, low-angled roofs with plenty, of shade, and clerestory windows. In Texas, I’d think, this would be a natural. But either buyers only want–or builders only want to built–big easement-hugging brick two story monstrosities with steeply pitched roofs. Ugh. It’s not as if land is THAT expensive here, rather the builder wants to put em up cheap and fast with little regard to refreshing or unexpected design. Maybe someday, huh?
Kelly Wittenauer says
These renderings are gorgeous! Glad to see someone looking in the right direction for inspiration – and achieving stunning results. Thanks for sharing.
Steven Murphy says
Hello Kelly,
I’m so glad that you and everyone else who has commented on 544-1 seem to like it so much. Those renderings, which are indeed incredible, were done by an amazing artist named Ilanit Maghen. She could make a paper bag look good! Presentation is everything. Thanks to all for the kind words.
Best,
Steven
Annie B. says
Thank you thank you thank you, Steven Murphy.
Lauryn says
I’ve always been more of a fan of earlier architecture styles, but these drawings are making me fall in love with this type of design. (Though the setting doesn’t hurt the cause!) I think what I love the most is the indoor-outdoor connection and the way the environment so integral to the design. I actually feel my blood pressure dropping when I think about what it would be like to live in such a space. Thank you so much for sharing your inspiration, Steven. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful!
lynda says
Wonderful reading. Thanks for giving us so much information. Wonderful homes. So much nicer than the mcmansions being built today.
Brigid Moore says
I was in Santa Barbara, CA a few weeks ago and had the pleasure of walking through this sprawling Cliff May designed house. It is for sale and I happened to be in town when it was on open house. It made me want to move back to my hometown – but for the price tag.
http://www.sothebyshomes.com/Santa-Barbara-Real-Estate/sales/0631919
Jay says
Great story and I think I like this plan best of all. Who wouldn’t want an entry and living room with windows onto a reflecting pool. I like the reference to FLW and the others, some of whom I am not familiar with. I can appreciate that somone is looking to the past ranch house style for inspiration for building today instead of those humongous boxes that spring up everywhere.