Gingko Glen is one of Willow Glen’s smallest and most quietly special Eichler pockets — a two-street enclave around Margot Place and Adele Place where late-1950s architecture, ginkgo-lined streets, radiant slab living, glass walls, and true neighborhood scarcity create one of San Jose’s most fascinating mid-century modern micro-markets.
Read MoreAn Eichler carport is not just covered parking. It is the place where the home meets the street, where daily routines begin, and where modern Silicon Valley life now asks for more: e-bike storage, cargo bikes, scooters, helmets, chargers, backpacks, locks, stroller parking, EV access, and Caltrain commutes. This Property Nerd guide explores how to create a bike-ready Eichler — or “bikeport” — without turning a beautiful mid-century modern entry into a sporting-goods warehouse.
Read MoreAn Eichler does not need a dedicated gym to become a wellness home. The atrium, radiant slab, glass walls, private garden, garage, and open floor plan are already part of the experience. From yoga and Pilates to strength training, recovery spaces, garage gyms, meditation corners, and indoor-outdoor movement, Eichlers offer a rare architectural foundation for healthier daily living. The key is creating wellness spaces that feel calm, flexible, and design-sensitive — not cluttered, commercial, or disconnected from the mid-century modern soul of the home.
Read MoreAn Eichler does not need a panoramic view to feel expansive. Sometimes all it needs is one perfectly framed tree, a slice of sky through the atrium, a private garden beyond a glass wall, or the quiet shadow of a roof beam crossing a courtyard. Eichlers are masters of borrowed landscape — the art of making trees, sky, neighboring greenery, fences, gardens, and filtered views feel like part of the home itself. This guide explains how Eichler buyers and sellers can understand sightlines, privacy, atriums, staging, landscaping, and resale value through one of the most powerful but overlooked forces in mid-century modern living: what the home chooses to see.
Read MoreBuying or selling an Eichler requires a different inspection mindset. These mid-century modern homes are loved for their flat or low-slope roofs, radiant-heated slabs, post-and-beam construction, glass walls, atriums, clerestory windows, and indoor-outdoor flow — but those same features require specialized due diligence. A standard inspection is important, but Eichler buyers and sellers also need to understand roof history, radiant heat condition, drainage, slab issues, termites, electrical upgrades, permits, remodel quality, insurance-sensitive details, and architectural integrity. This guide explains what to inspect, what to document, and how the Boyenga Team at Compass helps clients move through Eichler escrow with clarity and confidence.
Read MoreIn an Eichler, a remodel is not automatically an upgrade. Buyers often value the very details that make these homes different: exposed beams, tongue-and-groove ceilings, radiant-heated slabs, glass walls, atriums, clerestory windows, vertical siding, flat or low-slope rooflines, and seamless indoor-outdoor living. The best Eichler updates improve comfort, function, safety, and marketability while preserving the mid-century modern soul of the home. This guide explains what to restore, what to modernize, what to avoid, and how the Boyenga Team at Compass helps Eichler buyers and sellers make smarter real estate decisions.
Read MoreIn an Eichler, the landscape is not outside the architecture — it is part of it. Atriums, glass walls, private gardens, low rooflines, courtyards, side yards, fences, and outdoor rooms shape the entire mid-century modern living experience. The right landscape can make an Eichler feel calm, private, architectural, water-wise, fire-smart, and market-ready. The wrong landscape can block light, clutter the atrium, overwhelm the roofline, create maintenance issues, or weaken resale appeal. This guide explains how Eichler buyers and sellers can think about landscaping in a way that protects the soul of the home while meeting the realities of modern California living.
Read MoreJohn Brooks Boyd’s work reveals how modernist systems survive when ideal conditions disappear. Operating quietly within the Eichler organization, Boyd adapted architectural logic to sites, regulations, and environmental constraints without diluting the principles that defined Eichler Homes. His legacy is not one of authorship, but of continuity—demonstrating that the true resilience of mid-century modernism lies not in repetition, but in intelligent adaptation.
Read MoreEichler homes outperform nearly every traditional architectural style in delivering daily joy. From unmatched natural light and seamless indoor-outdoor flow to radiant-heated comfort and community-driven neighborhood design, Eichlers create an elevated lifestyle experience that few homes can replicate. Their post-and-beam architecture, walls of glass, and iconic atriums make these mid-century modern residences feel open, connected, and intentionally crafted for modern living in a way that Craftsman, Colonial, and most non-Eichler mid-century designs simply cannot match.
Read MoreBehind the clean lines of an Eichler home lies a world of mathematical precision. From modular post-and-beam grids to harmonically proportioned atriums and sun-calculated roof overhangs, Eichler design is a masterclass in geometry and balance. This deep dive reveals the hidden mathematical logic that creates the calm, intuitive harmony owners feel—and rarely realize is engineered into every beam, bay, and void.
Read MoreEichler homes were built not just by celebrated architects, but by Japanese-American craftsmen rising from internment, European modernist émigrés escaping war, and immigrant laborers whose skill and resilience shaped California’s most iconic mid-century neighborhoods. Behind every glass wall and post-and-beam roof is a human story of hope, diversity, and reinvention.
Read MoreFairwood Addition Eichler homes, located in Sunnyvale, offer mid-century modern design, high appreciation, and access to top Cupertino schools. Designed by Claude Oakland & Associates, these atrium and gallery-style homes on Chukar Court and Chickadee Court blend Eichler's architectural integrity with Silicon Valley convenience. The Boyenga Team at Compass, luxury home experts, provide exclusive real estate insights, off-market listings, and expert negotiation for buyers and sellers seeking these highly coveted properties.
Read MoreThe Boyenga Team’s expertise in Eichler home sales, combined with Compass’s 3-Phase Marketing Strategy, ensures that sellers maximize their home’s value while maintaining its architectural significance. By leveraging Private Exclusives, Compass Coming Soon, and strategic MLS launches, Eric and Janelle Boyenga help Eichler homeowners attract the right buyers, optimize pricing, and create pre-market demand, ensuring top-dollar sales with minimal risk.
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