Meet Maribeth, her darling daughter — and their 1977 contemporary / ranch house in Tennessee. Maribeth has seized the opportunity and given this house, an original time capsule, a fresh dose of 21st century flair. And yes, avocado appliances! Not only did Maribeth embrace them, she engineered a neighborhood swap to get a matching vintage dishwasher, too. Maribeth writes:
Dear Pam,
I have finally finished my 70’s (1977) ranch house renovation….
We had corresponded a couple of months ago about my avocado kitchen redo, but I wanted to get as much of the rest of the house finished as possible before I put up more pictures.
The appliances are original to the house, (even the trash compactor and central vacuum still worked great!) but the cabinets had to be replaced. The original layout was retained. Other than that, we replaced the wall-to-wall carpet with cork and replaced some of the “updated” lighting that came with the house when we purchased it last spring.
I wanted to furnish with a mix of 50’s through 70’s furniture. As anyone moving into the house in the 1970’s would probably have a similar collection. Most of it came from Craigslist and local vintage stores. My living room Kroehler sofa and chair was like brand new. The original owner never let anyone sit on it except for very special occasions.
Thanks so much for taking the time to look at my pictures and for your compliments — it is especially meaningful coming from you as your site had been the source of so much of my inspiration. We bought this house last winter… Since I was all the way up in coastal Maine, I had to do all of my house hunting on the internet. We had narrowed our search down to about 20 homes to visit in person the following week (only a few of which were ranch homes) when I saw this house pop up on a real estate site.
A double avocado stove! Just like the one we had when I was a kid. It was love at first site and I had already picked it to be my house. (If the realtor had featured those tiki door knobs, I might have purchased it over the internet.) So we did the obligatory looking at all the other homes but I knew this was the one. Huge open floor plan, Brady Bunch double entry doors, original appliances, even a pink mini tub and shower all in a nice, suburban neighborhood of similar designed homes. Sold!
It’s funny to think that the things that sold me on the house were the very things that probably turned off a multitude of potential buyers before me. In front of the beautiful stone wall and fireplace was an old, cracked wood stove and fire board covering the entire opening. I had no idea what I would find inside but it turned out they were hiding one gorgeous fireplace.
As for the kitchen, we had the cabinets recreated in MDF and painted, which turned out to be really economical. I splurged on the glass tile because I wanted to bring in the avocado and orange tones to make the appliances look deliberate and not as though I was saving my pennies for some shiny new stainless pieces someday. I dragged a like new avocado fridge down with me from Maine. (Some of the used appliance salespersons thought I was joking when I called to ask them if they had any avocado appliances.)
The only appliance missing was the dishwasher. Well, there was one but it was new. Imagine! What were these people thinking? Luckily, my 1970’s neighborhood has many of the original owners still residing in it and I found someone willing to swap their harvest gold whirlpool for my newer one. I’m planning to paint it avocado at some point.
Furnishing the home was lots of fun. We sold every last thing in Maine so that we could start over in true design of the house’s era. Amazingly, the mid-century trend has not caught on here yet and I’m finding beautiful pieces that people are selling at prices too good to be true.
But the really fun part has been in the details, or what my husband calls my “props”. The Britannica encylopedias and Reader’s digest books on the bookshelf, avocado and orange rotary phones, retro alarm clocks and ashtrays- even though we don’t smoke. I want it to feel completely authentic.
Even our parrotlet Pepe perches on a playhouse made from a 1950’s TV stand. I must have had some subconscious love of the 1970’s even before we bought the house because, in unpacking, I was amazed at how much avocado and burnt orange bake ware and bowls I had accumulated over the years. Several years ago, I lived in a 1972 Airstream Sovereign (a literal time capsule) and I had kept most of my tiki paraphernalia from it which is scattered around the house.
We are in the process of transforming the plain concrete slab in the backyard and hope to have it done by the spring. It will feature a low sitting wall and 5×7 pool with a 3 foot tiki fountain all backed by a wall of bamboo. I’m stumped on the type of patio furniture to use, though, so I am hoping to get some advice from you and your readers when the time comes to furnish it.
Anyway, that is the story of our flat roofed, so-ugly-its-kinda-not, late seventies ranch house. I hope your readers enjoy looking at it and I am looking forward to seeing the feedback. Helpful hints and advice is always appreciated!
Thanks again!
Cheers,
Maribeth
Maribeth, your house is such an inspiration — there is no question, you have a great touch. And what a lovely, memorable environment you are creating for your daughter to grow up. Patio furniture? Vintage Woodward, of course. Now that you have the vibes out, the retro decorating gods will send some your way, for sure. Tiny Cinderella tub — it’s of the variety here (these were made by a number of manufacturers, not just Kohler, and small, too.) And you have a Cinderella to go in it! Also, don’t let any magazines come after you for your story, okay? I’m going to pitch it, if that’s all right with you. Your home is picture perfect, a great story. Many thanks.
Meanwhile, readers, you can see a few more photos over on Maribeths flickr stream here.
rob gillim says
we are slowly redoing our kitchen, everything was avocado green. The sink, fridge, oven, stove top and range hood. The house was built in the 40’s and redone in the 70’s for an elderly lady. We even still have the outhouse in the back yard
pam kueber says
super cool, rob! i hope you kept all the avocado? and… i LOVE to see pics of outhouses!
rob gillim says
the fridge died, so sears took it away when we bought the new one and the range top and hood are out on the patio, probably going to the landfill. Then all we have left is the double sink, oven and floor
Pinky says
I remember some dishwashers had changeable front panels. If you unscrew the chrome strip on one side of the door you may find another front panel, and a different color on the back side of the gold. We had one that had black/white on one panel and two other colors on the second panel. Good luck!
Dennis says
Thank you for a look in to your home. I am in a Auto cadd class and I have picked Ranch to write about and your home gave me a better look at that style.
Country Crock says
You have my stereo…at least, the stereo I want, the exact model. I love the Zenith 2604/2670. Could you check on the back and confirm that yours is the 2604…not that I am OCD or anything. I have found a few of these on Craig’s list, but I don’t even have room for it right now. I bet it sounds great!
Do you want mid-century radio? You shoud tune in to AirstreamFM dot com. Run a cable from the computer soundcard to the AUX input on the Zenith, and you have instant 1960s easy-listening, “beautiful music radio.” You have the perfect stereo system for it! I love it.
Mel Kolstad says
OMG – the Brady double entry doors and that dining room set are TO DIE FOR!!! The whole house is absolutely perfect – Maribeth is not only a decorator but a curator as well – the authenticity really shines through!
Angela says
I love the sputnik light. Can you buy these new? If so, where?
pam kueber says
Angela – look for these vintage…ebay, etsy, craigslist, local shops…they are around but you’re going to have to work at it. good luck!
MaribethK says
Sara in WA, I was considering that change over not too long ago. It really would be better. I think you’ve motivated me to try it!
Stephanie, I actually have my original aluminum tree from when I was a kid-still in its original box. We always put it away in the little sleeves that come with the packaging so it’s still in great shape. Naturally, mom had no choice but to give it up this year. I did it up with pink balls this time.
Sara in WA says
Watched a Brady Bunch episode to see the patio furniture. (“research”) and found: round aluminum set with chairs that have turquoise/aqua color 1″ vinyl(?) bands on back and seat along with aluminum chaise with thick floral cushion with white background and olive and turquoise big flowers.
pam kueber says
Yes, Sara, I am very familiar with that kind of *research*.
nina462 says
I absolutely love your living room with the turquoise couch & chair (& pinch pleat drapes). I could move right in….oh, wait I have a 65 Ranch of my own. Mine is more of a mix of craftsman/ranch style.
I noticed something we have in common…can you look through your house from the windows? For example, someone looking in my front window can see right through the living room/dining room right into the back yard. Thanks to 2 big picture windows on each side of the house. (good thing I live next to some woods for privacy-ha)