Monday, August 22, 2011

One-Hit Wonder - Loizeaux

Loizeaux's Plan Book
Lots of different companies cashed in on the building boom of the late 1910s and 1920s (as my growing stack of old home plan books will attest to).  Tons of lumber companies followed the model set by Sears, Gordon Van Tyne, Wardway, Bennett, Aladdin, and others by publishing their own books of plans.  Loizeaux, based out of several locations in New Jersey, was a lumber and building supplies company that decided to expand their customer base by encouraging people to buy plans from them...plans that could then be erected with their materials, of course.  This plan book seems to be geared more toward the builder, given the amount of advertisements for building system products in its pages.

The Designs
The designs look like typical homes of the 1920s--modest, 2, 3, and 4 bedroom homes with nice curb appeal.  Some have a more "bungalow" appearance (ripping off Sears's popularity).  A large majority of the homes are neo-colonial, tudor or Dutch colonial.  There are a few oddities that reflect a Spanish Mission style.  Even though the homes are obviously designed for the middle class, most of the homes have a "service entrance", indicating that people still had maids or other house servants.  A large number of the homes have "sun rooms" or "sun porches", which were just rooms with extra windows.  People believed in the healing power of the sun at this time--even hospitals of the time had "sun porches" where patients were encouraged to convalesce in the healing rays of the sun--melanoma not withstanding.  Below are a few favorites.  Be sure to scroll down and see some of the ridiculous advertising.


Check out the rear entry--you had to walk through the kitchen or a bathroom
AND a bedroom to get to the living area from it.  

A "tudor"-styled home.  Small, but charming.

This is NOT...I repat...NOT a Sears home.

RIDICULOUS BUILDING PRODUCTS/AND ADVERTISING

Here we have a "Combination Bath".  I've never seen anything quite like it.  Requiring a large piece of the floor to be removed, I'm guessing this was discontinued due to the large amount of people killing themselves by slipping, falling, and/or drowning.
Here we have a "modern solution to home heating".  A furnace that can be put right in the living room--and no need for ductwork!  Who doesn't want a whole-house furnace right in their living room.  Get this--it would burn (according to the ad) hard coal, soft coal, coke, or wood.  At $97, there are cheaper ways to kill yourself or your loved ones via carbon-monoxide poisoning or burning.
An ad for tile.  Look at the ceiling in the kitchen (top picture).  Why on earth would you need a tiled kitchen ceiling?  Pie fight, anyone???
Yes, please show me how to take my Victorian home and make it look hideous!!!  Sadly, as the old Victorian homes fell out of fashion, this was done a lot.  The one on the bottom is particularly ugly.  How to make a Victorian into an Eastern European housing block.

Not outrageous--this was the original rear cover.



1 comment:

  1. Was this the same Loizeaux company which now does those spectacular demolitions?

    ReplyDelete