Selling a Silicon Valley Eichler or mid-century modern home is all about maximizing ROI without sacrificing architectural soul. Strategic, design-aligned upgrades—paired with Compass Concierge and the expert guidance of Eric & Janelle Boyenga—help sellers boost value, accelerate days on market, and preserve iconic MCM authenticity. This ROI Matrix details which improvements deliver the strongest returns while keeping your Eichler’s character intact.
Read MoreTucked beside Red Morton Park, the Fairwood tract—better known as the Lyons Street Eichlers—reads like a living museum of mid-century modern. Thirty-ish single-story, post-and-beam homes with floor-to-ceiling glass, quiet rooflines, and radiant-heated slabs form a one-block community locals call “Dream Street.” Inventory is scarce, stewardship is high, and demand is persistent: purists prize preserved mahogany and original profiles while design-savvy families covet indoor-outdoor flow, schools, and central Redwood City access. The result is a timeless neighborhood where architectural integrity and neighborly culture compound long-term value—proof that good design never goes out of style.
Read MoreExplore why Joseph Eichler’s mid-century modern homes were built without baseboards – and how this intentional detail reinforces modernist design values. Discover how the absence of baseboards in Eichler homes creates floating wall planes, seamless indoor-outdoor transitions, and an honest celebration of materials that together define the iconic Eichler aesthetic.
Read More“From Philippine mahogany paneling and globe pendant lights to radiant-heated floors and tongue-and-groove ceilings, Eichler homes were built with bold, beautiful materials that defined mid-century California modernism. Discover the specs that shaped Silicon Valley Eichlers—and how to restore them with authenticity.”
Read MoreEichler homes feel different—for a reason. With floor-to-ceiling glass walls, open atriums, and seamless indoor-outdoor flow, these mid-century modern icons were designed to support mental wellness, natural light exposure, and biophilic living long before wellness architecture was a trend.
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