December 2006
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Those who stumble on Westlake immediately notice something delightfully strange about this foggy suburb south of San Francisco: it’s an architectural time capsule, straight out of the era when poodle skirts were the fashion and Chevys ruled the road. And as people start to prize quality craftsmanship over size, this quirky enclave of Daly City is enjoying a little renaissance.
It all started after World War II with Henry Doelger, a successful local builder influenced by the space age–crazed ’50s. In Westlake, Doelger built Northern California’s first-ever large-scale suburban development and one of the few fully planned burbs in the nation. His 6,500 midcentury tract homes boasted boxy, atomic-age designs and modest, functional layouts for family living.
“You literally didn’t have to leave your neighborhood,” says Rob Keil, author of Little Boxes: The Architecture of a Classic Midcentury Suburb. “Basically, if an alien were to fly down in the ’50s and land there, it would think, ‘This is what life’s like on Earth.’” Westlake had everything: schools, churches, a shopping center, parks, a medical facility, a library, even a futuristic bowling alley. Today, its population is about half Asian American, with some original Westlakers and a sprinkling of urbanites drawn by the architecture.
Folk singer Malvina Reynolds sang disapprovingly of Westlake’s homes in her 1962 anthem “Little Boxes,” but nearly 50 years later these “little boxes made of ticky-tacky” have proven that conformity can be sweet.
THE SIGHTS
To see how they lived in the ’50s, jet across John Daly Blvd. and up Sheffield Drive . Most popular were architect Ed Hageman’s cartoonish “Fish n’ Chip” homes, many barely exceeding 1,000 square feet. With crazily slanted roofs and protruding wraparound windows, the split-level homes are complemented by futuristically shaped shrubs and manicured lawns. (Please don’t disturb the current residents!)
Follow the road around and down Cliffside Drive to see the first phase of the Westlake housing development, built in 1949.
For a bit of California history, travel north on Lake Merced Boule-vard to the Broderick-Terry Duel site, where in 1859 two prominent politicians settled an argument by pistol over whether California should be a free or slave state. U.S. Senator David Broderick, who opposed slavery, died three days later from the chest wound inflicted by former California Supreme Court chief justice David Terry. Broderick’s death made him a martyr and helped sway popular support for keeping California a free state. 1100 Lake Merced Blvd.
Heading back down Lake Merced, veer right on Northgate into the “Olympic” residential area. Slow down at Henry Doelger’s house, built circa 1953, which at one time contained a movie theater and an indoor pool. Today, most suburb developers build and get out, but Doelger made his home in Westlake. 112 Northgate Ave.
Heading uphill on Southgate, you’ll see the progression of Westlake homes. The later models were often upgraded with more spacious layouts and fancied
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