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Home / The Museum of Mid Century Material Culture / time capsule homes

74 midcentury modern houses in Salt Lake City – driving tour with Mony Ty

pam kueber - Updated: January 29, 2019

Retro Renovation stopped publishing in 2021; these stories remain for historical information, as potential continued resources, and for archival purposes.

midcentury modern salt lake city


Midcentury modern houses galore in Salt Lake City… Serene, uncongested neighborhoods that read, to me, like the Southern California utopia of the 1960s:  Oh my gosh, who knew? I was recently in Salt Lake City for a blogging conference and arrived a day early to take up real estate agent Mony Ty’s gracious offer of a driving tour of Salt Lake City’s midcentury modern neighborhoods. Ten years ago, Mony began specializing in midcentury modern real estate. You will recall, we first “met” him, when he gave me permission to feature his photos of Dean Gustavson’s 1957 time capsule house with a private observatory. During our afternoon together I learned that, today, Mony has curated a rolodex (remember those?) of about 1,000 notable examples of midcentury modern houses in Salt Lake City. And his standards are tougher than mine — I am betting that if you include all the cute midcentury modests and kitschy moderns, we are talking, what?, 10,000 fantastic midcentury houses, all cloistered in very drivable neighborhoods. Mony and I drove around for about four hours on a cold, kind of cloudy January day (great for taking photos). The mid mod houses went on and on and one — just like the cold clear beautiful mountain desert sky.

My overall impression: Amazement. I was born and raised in Southern California in the 1960s — Carlsbad, Oceanside and Vista, it hardly got any better. And to me, 40 years later, these Salt Lake City neighborhoods — and their overall easy, expansive feel — remind me of those early Southern California days, before SoCal became overrun with freeways, endless subdivisions and smog. These eminently “collectible” midcentury houses in SLC also seem to be way way cheaper. And they are Gorgeous.

Mony drove me through three Salt Lake City neighborhoods built in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. It was house after house after house after house of beautiful, generally unremuddled midcentury loveliness, modern and “modest” alike.

notice the roofline!

Every style and detail you could possible imagine — international, MCM, prairie Frank Lloyd Wright, colonial, cape, storybook ranch, Cliff May ranch, flat roof, butterfly roof, ski jump roof… on and on it goes it terms of ideas and inspiration straight from the way-back-midcentury-time-machine. I jumped online to see if I could read about this seemingly rapid-fire build up of gorgeous midcentury modern homes in Salt Lake Cities in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s — but I could find no articles. I’d love to include a link here, if someone can find one. I am so curious: Why so many gorgeous examples?

I’ll say it again: The midcentury houses went on and on — just like the cold clear beautiful mountain desert sky. I took 300 photos. 81 presented today –>

Above #5.

Above: #6

Above #7.

Above: #8.

Above: #9.

Above: #10.

Above: #11.

Above: #12.

Above: #13.

Above: #14.

Above: #15.

Above: #16.

Above: #17.

Above: #18.

Above: #19.

Above: #20. Note: This is the same house as #4 photo — note the amazing ski jump roofline in photo #4. In this photo, you can see the clerestory window design supporting that roofline. Must be amazing to see inside.

Above: #21. Same house as #4 and #20. Love the mix of materials.

Above: #22.

Above: #23.

Above: #24.

Above: #25.

Above: #26. Roy Lichtenstein style garage door mural.

Above: #26: House built right into a rock.

Above: #27.

Above: #28.

Above: #29.

Above: #30.

Above: #31.

Above: #32.

Above: #33.

Above: #34.

Above: #35.

Above: #36.

Above: #37.

Above: #38.

Above: #39.

Above: #40.

Above: #41.

Above: #42.

Above: #43.

Above: #44.

Above: #45.

Above: #46.

Above: #47.

Above: #48.

Above: #49.

Above: #50.

Above: #51.

Above: #52.

Above: #53.

Above: #54.

Above: #55.

Above: #56.

Above: #57.

Above: #58.

Above: #59.

Above: #60.

Above: #61.

Above: #62.

Above: #63.

Midcentury modern Salt Lake City

Above: #64.

Above: #65.

Above: #66

Above: #67.

Above: #68.

Above: #69.

Above: #70.

Above: #71.

Above: #72.

Above: #73.

Above: #74.

Above: #75.

Above: #76.

Above: #77.

Above: #78.

Above: #79.

Above: #80.

 Above: #81.

Now wasn’t that fun?

SUPER MEGA THANKS to Mony Ty, Salt Lake City midcentury modern real estate agent extraordinaire, for graciously taking me on this amazing tour. I have to admit, I kept thinking he would say, “I have to get back to work now, Pam” but no, we just kept driving.

Now that I have incited all readers to immediately move to Salt Lake City, please be sure to buy from Mony. Here is his real estate homepage. And, while you’re on his site, be sure to check out his listings.

All content as published is copyright RetroRenovation.com 2012.
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CATEGORIES:
time capsule homes

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66 comments

Comments

  1. nickarmadillo says

    February 6, 2012 at 10:22 am

    Wow! That’s pretty cool. I love the covered car port on #77/78. That’s a really unique feature.

  2. Tony P says

    February 6, 2012 at 10:07 am

    I like the tudor in Above #12.

  3. JKaye says

    February 6, 2012 at 9:38 am

    Many thanks to Mony Ty for driving you around, and thank you for sharing these amazing houses. The word amazing doesn’t even begin to describe some of them. But, my heart went out to the little ranch with the ruffly curtains in the windows in the intro. You can tell it is someone’s home sweet home.

  4. Annie B. says

    February 6, 2012 at 9:09 am

    Wow. And I thought the NC Triange area had a lot of MCM’s. Wow.

    Special thanks to Mony for all this inspiration. I hope each one of these incredible homes will be preserved with love and care.

    Pam, I can just imagine what a grand time you had on this tour. Thanks so much for sharing it with us.

  5. Michael says

    February 6, 2012 at 8:48 am

    I too started to mentally check-off favourites but hit ‘overload’ very quickly! What a fascinating tour. And is the art deco inspired building in photos 43-45 a residence?!

    • chris says

      February 6, 2012 at 10:24 am

      Michael — I had the same question!

    • Mony Ty says

      February 7, 2012 at 6:17 pm

      Yes. there are about dozen residentual art deco style in the Salt Lake area.

  6. Retrosandie says

    February 6, 2012 at 8:32 am

    What a wonderful tour Pam! I hope we get to see the rest of your photos!! Now…wouldn’t it be fantastic to just have a peek inside each one……. 🙂

  7. Jenny says

    February 6, 2012 at 8:22 am

    Thanks for sharing all of these amazing pictures. What a great way to start the day. I love the round “carport” (? for lack of a better word) in nos. 78 and 79. That’s just super cool 😉

  8. wendy says

    February 6, 2012 at 8:21 am

    It’s taken me 15 minutes to clean the drool off of my desk. Simply wonderful!

  9. Rebecca says

    February 6, 2012 at 7:42 am

    Amazing! that mural on the garage door is exactly why I don’t live in a neighborhood with an HOA!
    My parents used to live just north of SLC and I loved visiting–gorgeous things to look at everywhere you turn.

  10. BungalowBILL says

    February 6, 2012 at 7:38 am

    Oh boy. I was starting to make a list of all the homes I wanted and I had to give up because I lost count. There’s some mid century magnificence going on in Utah.

    • Ann-Marie Meyers says

      February 6, 2012 at 2:37 pm

      Same here, my tile crush, BungalowBill. I even had two lists: Houses I could really live in, and If money were no object, and I still couldn’t keep track.
      I guess my best hope is to figure out how to make this 1986 Texas traditional suburban ranch house as retro as possible without totally ruining it for future generations who might someday appreciation late 20th century design.

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