“Eichler front facades are a masterclass in modernist restraint—combining vertical siding, asymmetrical rooflines, clerestory windows, and carports to create architecture that prioritizes privacy, light, and clean design. What looks simple on the surface reveals a deep commitment to form, function, and timeless California modernism.”
Read MoreFrom a Ladera neighborhood dance party in 1966 to Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir’s early days in Palo Alto, the story of Eichler homes and the Grateful Dead is deeply intertwined with the cultural revolution of 1960s California. These modernist homes and psychedelic pioneers shared geography, ethos, and a love for openness, experimentation, and community.
Read MoreFrom Marin’s unfinished waterfront enclaves to Sacramento’s half-built tracts and unrealized high-rise dreams, these “lost” Eichler projects reveal the untold story of a visionary developer whose modernist ambitions stretched beyond what the mid-century market could bear. Explore the homes that never were—and what they still tell us about Joseph Eichler’s legacy.
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