This article was originally published in the Anaheim Historical Society’s January 2010 newsletter. I have been in touch with the author and we have shared much information on Ross Cortese, who developed and built four very distinctive tracts of single-family residential h0mes, before going onto even more success as the developer f the Leisure World senior communities. Cortese’s first tract in this area was the Lakewood Rancho Estates in Long Beach, northeast of the corner of Studebaker & Spring. he built these using a prefab design by Cliff May and Chris Choate. Cortese used these same plans for his Frematic Homes in Anaheim. For his much bigger development of Rossmoor, Cortese parted ways with may and Choate, but still used many of their ideas in his collaboration with architect Earle Kaltenbach, who had just finished designing Tomorrowland for the brand new Disneyland.
By Dave Bell
In the mid-1950s, Ross W. Cortese (RWC) built 2 Anaheim “Frematic” tracts. After over half a century, these continue to be among the very few truly modern tract houses ever built. The houses that still possess most or all of the original styling features have great architectural significance.
THE BUILDER
In 1954 RWC built the Long Beach “Rancho” tract of about 619 modern homes at Spring & Studebaker. Cliff May was the architect. After building our modern LaPalma-Brookhurst & Gilbert-Broadway tracts in Anaheim, RWC then built another tract in Rossmoor. After that, he stopped building tracts and instead built 8 active-adult/senior communities with a total capacity of about 60,000 people: two were Leisure World in Seal Beach & Laguna Woods. RWC accomplished all this starting as a fruit peddler (to help support his family in Glendale) with a 10th-grade education. He died Oct 31, 1991 at age 74 in Orange, CA.
THE TRACTS
The LaPalma-Brookhurst tract has 156 modern houses, built mostly in 1955 on lots varying from 6,000 to 7,000 sq. ft. There are 4 basic models: High-roof & low-roof with1,480 sq. ft. and high-roof & low-roof with 1,240 sq. ft. The 11 non-modern houses at the south end of Lotus apparently were built in 1962 & NOT by RWC.
The Gilbert-Broadway tract has 216 modern houses built mostly in 1956. About a third have 6,000 sq. ft. lots and the rest vary up to 10,000 sq. ft.
- High-roof & low-roof 1480 sq. ft. models same as the La P.-B. tract . . .
- But the Gilbert tract has a higher percentage of the highroof 1,480 sq. ft. houses than La P.-B.
- High-roof & low-roof 1,336 sq. ft. models have a back door & inside laundry area.
- 4 non-modern houses at the east end of Transit are believed to be RWC’s first display models for the City of Rossmoor, under construction in 1957.
CONSTRUCTION & STYLING
RWC’s houses have a “post & beam” skeleton. This is completely different from the “platform framing” concept (or its predecessor, “balloon framing”) used to build many “postwar” tract houses. One advantage of the post & beam construction in our houses is that windows & doors can be relocated in four-foot increments without worrying about load-bearing walls.
The 2 key styling features are the “indoor-outdoor” concept and the ultra-low profile. Both of these give the illusion of larger houses on larger lots, as viewed from the inside and from the outside. The floor-to-roof glass blurs the boundary of the house. When you’re out in the typical 15’ deep back yard, it seems bigger because your field of vision extends into the house instead of stopping at a tall, solid wall. The panels of textured glass admit diffused natural sunlight and make what you view through them fade, as if looking off into a much greater distance. The houses really are lower than traditional ranch houses. The house is on a slab, end walls are 7’ high instead of 8’, the roof rises at only about 9 degrees, and the 4’ overhangs further keep the modest-sized houses from looking small & boxy (“low & sleek” has been the hallmark style of sports cars over many decades). Inside, the open-beam ceilings give a spacious feel, but the “shelves” positioned just
above door top level create intimate areas and provide a perfect location to install indirect lighting or recessed down-lights. If you reduce the glass area, install window coverings, cut off the extended beams and rafters or cover the ceiling rafters with drywall, this will definitely make the houses look, well… small, boxy & dark.
Please feel free to contact us or come by to see our house (weekends are best).
Dave and Sandie Bell
Home phone 714.776.6564
Home email: 1950s-modern@sbcglobal.net
Editor’s Note: Dave Bell is a Mechanical Engineer by profession; and a Member of the National Trust for Historic Preservation
(member #46566824)
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In 1960 we purchased a Frematic home, Anaheim site at Gilbert and Broadway. The address is 111 Level Place. We left there and moved to Minnesota in 1972. I am trying to do some research on these homes as I have been studying mid century modern architecture in Las Vegas where we now live. On a recent tour I was reminded that the developments that I was visiting here were so much like our Anaheim home. That piqued my interest in finding out more about the architects responsible for the Frematic designs. A group of us from our old neighborhood have remained friends, on family still lives there! Jack was able to give me the name of Ross Cortese and now I am wanting to know more about the architects and the project history. I am delighted to have your article and post and wonder if you might direct me to more sources of information. Thanking you in advance.
Sharon Haskell
6509 Zinnia Court
Las Vegas NV 89108
702.395.0990
The Frematic Homes — as well as the Lakewood Rancho Estates were designed by world-famous designer Cliff May and his architect partner Chris Choate.
Just google Cliff May’s name and you will come up with more information than you ever wanted.
He is basically the designer who invented the “ranch style” home which revolutionized post WWII architecture.
Sunset Magazine produced two books of his work. He did a ton of high end homes but in the early 1950s he was intrigued by efficient, economical construction so he and Choate designed a pre-fab house package based on simple interchangeable, modular, (yet easily expandable) post and beam construction. The cost was quite low and this is what intrigued developer Ross Cortese to dump his original Lakewood Rancho design and work with May and Choate. The homes featured garages in front and floor to ceiling rear doors and window which opened to the back yard and made that the entertainment center of the home. This was revolutionary, and is now the standard for almost all new construction.
I have a lot of info on Cortese and May and I’m trying to put it online when I can. Shorthanding Cortese’s career would go like this.
One good site to get started for more info is:
http://www.ranchostyle.com/cliffnotes.html
http://www.eichlernetwork.com/article/cliff-may-ranchos-rancho-estates-long-beach
and also check out mid century modern forum at
http://www.lottaliving.com/bb/
Click the second link which is also
http://www.lottaliving.com/bb/viewforum.php?f=4&sid=b5de3a1ece7f875730934adba129e7e6
Hope these help for starters
Larry
Sharon,
This house just sold on Dec 1, 2011. I live in the neighborhood (my family is an original owner) and I went to an open house. I liked the addition onto the back of the house. It seemed to offer this den type living space, and didn’t really diminish the feel of the garden space around the house. Did you complete this addition to the house?