The clean lines, the geometric decorative elements, the seamless blending of indoor and outdoor space… I sure do love mid-century modern architecture.
Do you know what I love more? My children. And that is why I will never live in my MCM dream home. Because mid-century modern architecture is designed to KILL YOUR CHILDREN. (Also, moderately clumsy or drunk adults).
As a public service, Projectophile is alerting its readers to the dangers posed by key elements of mid-century modern residential design.
1. OPEN LEDGES:
I love open, flowing space as much as the next modern girl. But I know it would only be a matter of minutes before my kid flings himself off one of these deadly ledges…
Someone needs to call protective services on this place, because this stylish modern mother is too absorbed in her reading to notice that all her children have fallen into the living room garden:
2. FIRE, WATER, AND OTHER DEATH TRAPS INSPIRED BY NATURE:
First of all, make sure your kid wears her helmet when she inevitably climbs up, and then falls of of, this rock formation in your dream living room.
As soon as you turn around to fetch the marshmallows, Junior is going to stumble right into that open fireplace (and stumble out with some third-degree burns). And watch out for that mysterious little nook on the right!
The use of indoor reflecting pools creates a calm and deadly space in your modern dream home:
Children in mid-century modern homes are advised to wear flotation devices at all times. This glamorous couple has no idea what danger lurks in that strangely-placed reflective pool.
And for goodness sake, don’t send your kids trick-or-treating near this Mid-Century Modern fortress:
3. FLOATING STAIRS:
Nothing is more un-modern than an unsightly railing on your stairs. To add extra danger to your mid-century staircase, twist the stairs into a dramatic 180-degree turn, or simply make the angle of the stairs extra steep.
(Hey, aren’t these just a bunch of IKEA Lack shelves nailed to a wall?)

These extra-dangerous stairs lead right to the ceiling, guaranteeing a concussion for your curious child.
These soaring, multi-story bannisters add a touch of safety, but you know my kid would totally get her head stuck in between them. Keep a crowbar handy to pry her free…
The mid-century dream house below comes with its own on-site medical team, in the very likely event that your children will either drown, fall, slip on those mossy stairs, or impale themselves on a rock.
If you care about your children’s safety, perhaps you’ll want to settle down in a late Georgian colonial revival.











Great post! Tangentially related, but it reminded me of this: http://www.manystuff.org/?p=8525
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Thanks, Matt. Funny, I had the exact same thought about movie villains when researching this piece — why do they all live in these amazing modernist houses? Though a true villain wouldn’t live in a house; he’d be found in a lair or a perhaps the inside of a modernist volcano. The other thing I noticed was that none of these photos from the 50s and 60s ever showed families–much less children– living inside of them. But these days, if you open a copy of Dwell magazine, they seem to go out of their way to show kids playing, parents making dinner, etc. Maybe to offset that villainous vibe that modern architecture suggests.
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Especially since that was right in the baby boom. Escapism, maybe?!
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We lived in several homes like that as a child. I also grew up next door to the largest collection of Frank Lloyd Wright architecture in the world. It was easier (still is) to walk on the roofs of the walkways than on the walkways themselves. Don’t get me started about exploring the inside of the college through the ventilation ducts at age 12 . . .
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Speaking of Dwell, from their most recent issue:
http://www.dwell.com/sites/default/files/styles/huge/public/april-2013-living-edge.jpg?itok=_kKvINDs
Fits right in with this theme.
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“Florida”, did you live near Florida Southern University? We just visited to see the FLW architecture. Beautiful! I’d love to hear your story about exploring the college through the ventilation ducts!
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That would be a fun show.
Camille Paglia noted the popularity of Modernist architecture in Hollywood, and also its disproportionate favor among villains.
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Mysterious nook is likely an indoor barbeque. Add carbon monoxide poisoning for the whole family to your list!
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“Mysterious nook” is where you store the firewood.
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And let’s not forget the deadly mold from all those indoors pools LOL
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THIS is awesome! Thank you so much for the belly-laughs! I do live in a mid-century modern home, but there are no exciting ledges, rock formations, pools, cliffs, or rabid animals inside. Alas, nothing with which to kill or maim the children. It is a boring mid-century modern home, but I squint and pretend it came right out of the pages of “McCall’s Book of Modern Houses.”
My son did burn his finger on the fireplace doors, once.
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Thanks for reinforcing my design decision. My house will be the sexiest child unfriendly one-bedroom loft home ever. This really made me laugh.
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My sister and I grew up in one of those: indoor garden, ledges, nooks and all. Best house I ever lived in, especially when the typhoons blew through during monsoon season.
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Humorous, but with the inevitable creep of the building code over the last 50 or 60 years a lot of these things couldn’t be built today.
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When applied to scientific reason, it is called “Natural Selection”. The bright kids will be just fine. The others…well lets just say evolution doesn’t play favorites… Unless you don’t follow scientific reasoning. 🙂
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Jeff said it . Smart kids would be fine😝
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No. Dextrous children would be fine. Smart and Dextrous children do not form disjoint sets, but the overlap is not complete, either.
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Smart kids avoid, and dexterous kids will climb unscathed. It’s the dumb and clumsy kids that would be eliminated from the gene pool.
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No. Kids with high intelligence have a sense of curiosity vastly larger than innate common sense. They’d all get injured while experimenting.
Boring kids with limited imaginations would be fine.
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yep. kinda explains what we have now as ‘adults’
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Look at Cameron from Ferris Bueler, he turned out alright
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Excellent point!!!!!
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This is absolutely hilarious. We are renovating an MCM right now, and while we don’t have any sweet ledges or indoor rock formations, I’d love an indoor garden area! Thanks for sharing this.
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Bless your heart, it must be a hardship having:
A – Exceptionally retarded children
B – Normal children
C – The usual combination of the two
And to think, childhood malidies in third world countries claim more lives to this day than MCM ever did.
The second thought that popped into my head was a Mike Myers/Nicole Kidman skit set in one of these homes.
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Funny! When I was looking at stone for the outside of our new house, I was thinking “climbing wall”! Guess the feds haven’t noticed that yet and limited rock to 24″. Only a matter of time though.
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Raising children in one of those homes is how you get kids with common sense instead of dumb-asses.
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Well said.
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Think of it as evolution in action.
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You apparently don’t have children or it has been far too long since you’ve been around some.
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Used to babysit kids in a home with a modern loft with no railing on the edge. Their favorite game was to pretend that the little one had fallen over the edge. I would come into the room and find him lying below it moaning in pain while the older one urgently screamed for help. Fun.
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Oh…that’s something I would have done as a child. But alas, I am an “only”.
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Very funny and certainly very true. I never thought of MCM as being Darwin Design. Love the look. And no, my son would never have survived. Enough said.
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I’m actually somewhat offended by this article. I don’t find it funny at all, because it’s just another example of how we’ve dumbed down society, and as well, this is also a perfect example of how this “nanny state” we’ve come to live under came about… DO GOODERS!
“I want to do good, so we must protect the children.”
How about this for a change… be a good parent… teach your child consequences.
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“How about this for a change… be a good parent… teach your child consequences.”
lol…I guessing your kids were born ten years old, because it sure doesn’t sound like you’ve ever met a toddler.
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To suggest that all places in a home be toddler-proof is absurd. Without proper attention, the typical kitchen, staircase and living room in any home can be dangerous, even fatal, to a small child.
It’s refreshing to see designs that eschew the current trend to risk manage every aspect of our lives.
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“To suggest that all places in a home be toddler-proof is absurd.”
Who is suggesting that?
“risk manage every aspect of our lives.”
I’m suggesting that not buying a house with a pond in the living room or an easily accessible >4mtr drop when you have toddlers, is probably not pushing the idea of risk management into the realms of do gooders and nanny states.
Kevin is quite right in that more children need to be taught about consequences, but there are better ways of doing that than letting them break their neck or drown in the house.
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Uhhhh. Have you ever known a kid who was learning how to walk? Cuz I have! 🙂 And I’ve also known an adult who had horrific migraines! And fell down *everything! And was worse than a kid! and yeah I think these houses would probably kill me, too.
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Totally agree. Parents need to be parents and lead their children, not follow them.
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This post is less a commentary on mid century modern architecture and more about contemporary over-protective paranoia and the unwillingness of parents today to teach boundaries to their children.
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Bingo!
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Home design with Natural Selection in mind!
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That was my second thought — after the one above about today’s over-protective parents.
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Isn’t that last house the one they used as “Willard Whyte’s” house in the James Bond movie, Diamonds Are Forever? Sean Connery had a fight scene with two amazonian female bodyguards in the pool/living room.
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Looks like it to me. Bond almost drowned there because the architect carelessly placed a swimming pool beneath a poorly secured opening in the room where the fight scene took place.
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There was a girl in my high school with a big scar on her leg. She got it trying to walk through a plate glass window in a Frank Lloyd Wright house when she was 7.
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Good thing we don’t use plate glass windows anymore. Oh, wait…
😉
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Sounds like she succeeded in walking through the window.
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Time to invent force fields…
Solar powered, of course.
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I lived in a FLW-designed home for a while as I raised my daughter. It was full of these dangers and yet she survived and flourished unscathed. Good genetics? Yes. Allowed to investigate and ask questions? Yes. Surrounded by bubble plastic, a sense of paranoia and crying over spilled milk? Definitely not! Today she is a self sufficient young lady that looks at things realistically and is always ready to scrape an elbow to enjoy herself. These homes are friggin beautiful by the way. I hate the 4 white gypsum walls / square room / boring homes that most consider palaces.
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Ditto on the boring safety of “4 white gypsum walls”.
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Darwin works thus:
Smart parents: don’t subject their children to constant danger: Kids survive, passing on their parents intelligence.
Uncaring or dumb parents: subject their children to constant danger: Darwin does his thing adjusting for age, agility and intelligence.
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My father built the Catalano house (b/w pic) at the top of your post. Sadly the house has been demolished, but no children were injured or died at this MCM.
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I spent my first 6 yrs in a Mies van der Rohe townhouse in Detroit, Lafayette Park. It has the open, floating stairs gong up. One day when I was around 1-2, I fell through the stairs to the floor. Being the last of three, my mother did not panic but likely just gave me a pat on the bottom and sent my off on my adventures.
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I still totally wanna ride my bike off the deck in #2.
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Here’s a platform elevator, three stories, no railings, hardly any gap between the elevator and the approaching floor or ceiling. How many severed body parts lying in the basement?
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The stairs somehow served a family: http://midcenturymonster.files.wordpress.com/2011/02/gal_watn_brady_stairs1.jpg
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Toddler-proof room. http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-oV-eKsNpqOA/UDAfHj0bS6I/AAAAAAAAvho/6b-9ry-l7OA/s1600/padded+cell.jpg
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Nice architecture, but you know a few helicopter parent types will take this article seriously.
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When we were kids, around 7-10 years old, we would play in construction sites after the workmen went home. Somehow we survived!
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We did that, too! Although me and friend got stuck in an unfinished basement for the better part of a day. We jumped in without realizing they hadn’t built the stairs out yet.
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I went to the funeral of an 11-year-old boy that was playing around a gravel pit with some friends. He fell in and the paramedics didn’t manage to save him.
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This made me laugh out loud in hysterics in front of strangers at Starbucks and I don’t care. Priceless!
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Ha! My sister Karen Dwyer sent me your link! Love it! Laughing out loud over here! Erin
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Karen and I were in a birthing class together in Chicago… haven’t seen her and Dan and Abby since they moved. Glad you liked the post, Erin.
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Loved the article and all the funny comments. In re movie villians and MCM architecture, check out the Vandamm house in Alfred Hitchcock’s North By Northwest. Great movie and great LOOKING “house”…really just an elaborate set built specifically for the movie.
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Thanks. Super funny.
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Hilarious! I agree, these may not be the best choice of home for people with kids, but not everyone has kids!
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How’d I survive growing up in the 60’s? Some of these homes remind me of that house in “North by Northwest”!
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Best part of my childhood was jumping off that roof ledge into the welcoming piles of snow below! No broken bones, not scrapes. Why? Because we weren’t complete morons and knew exactly how deep that snow had to be to safely land. Yes even kids can think. Funny I don’t recall being allowed on the roof until I was old enough know better.
I love these houses and yes would raise my kids in them. Awesome blog post though. Made me laugh out loud.
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My goodness. You must have been born after 1980. Having children was only for the non hip people. These designs were only dangerous during parties.
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