In discussing this exaggerated Modern form of architecture, people often ask where the name "Googie" came from. It came from a Los Angeles Coffee Shop called "Googie's" (next door to the famous Schwab's Pharmacy) which was designed by the great Modernist architect John Lautner. Architecture critic Douglas Haskell disliked the style intensely and wrote a cutting tounge-in-cheek article about it in the February 1952 issue of
House and Home magazine. The name stuck, first as a perjorative, but later as simply a non-judgemental descriptor. For purposes of historical documentation, here is that article...
GOOGIE ARCHITECTURE
By Douglas Haskell
House and Home, Feb. 1952
“We call it Googie architecture,” said Professor Thrugg, “named after a remarkable restaurant in Los Angeles called Googie’s.
That’s one you should see. (Photo, above) It starts off on the level like any other building. But suddenly it breaks for the sky. The bright red roof of cellular steel decking suddenly tilts upward as if swung on a hinge, and the while building goes up with it like a rocket ramp. But there is another building next door. So the flight stops as suddenly as it began.
“It seems to symbolize life today,” sighed the Professor, “skyward aspiration blocked by Schwab’s Pharmacy.
“My Los Angeles companion saw it differently,” continued the Prof. “He said, ‘looks funny, but I guess the guy has the right to do it that way if it attracts attention to his business.’”
“Is it a commercial motive?” asked a student, getting out his notes. “Do you mean that Googie architecture is like Mother Goose -- night clubs and gas stations shaped like Cinderella slippers or old-ladies-who-lived-in-the-shoe or stucco pumpkins?”
“No,” replied the Prof., “this resemblance is superficial. Googie is mostly houses. And Googie goes deeper. You underestimate the seriousness of Googie. Think of it! – Googie is produced by architects, not by ambitious mechanics, and some of these architects starve for it. After all, they are working in Hollywood, and Hollywood has let them know what it expects from them.
I refer you to that great popular classic, The Fountainhead. You may
recall that every building the mythical hero Roarke created struck his
audience on the head like a thunderclap. Each was Original. Each was a
Revelation. None resembled any building ever done before.
“So the Googie architect knows that somehow he has to surpass everybody if he can – and that includes Frank Lloyd Wright.
“You can see why Googie architecture then becomes Modern Architecture Uninhibited.”
“Do you mean then," asked the student, “that Googie is an art in which anything and everything goes?”
“So
long as it is modern,” came back the Prof. “Googie can have string
windows – but never 16-light colonial sash. It can have inverted
triangle roofs but never a cornice. It may be decked out in what my
Googie friends call ‘vertical or horizontal louvers’ but never in green
shutters. The first rule of Googie is, ‘It can’t be orgiastic if it’s
not organic.’”
“Does it have canons of form?”
“It does
indeed. The first is that although it must look organic it must be
abstract. If a house looks like mushrooms, they must be abstract
mushrooms. If it looks like a bird, this must be a geometric bird.
(Nothing so naïve as Mother Goose!) It’s better yet if the house has
more than one theme: like an abstract mushroom surmounted by an abstract
bird.
Paraphrasing Oscar Wilde, the Googie architect declares,
‘When the public can’t make it out, the artist is in harmony with
himself.’”
“Does it have principles of construction?”
“Yes,
Googie has set modern construction free. You may have noted for some
time the trend in modern architecture to make light of gravity, to get
playful with it. Googie goes farther: it ignores gravity altogether.
“In
Googie whenever possible the building must hang from the sky. Where
nature and engineering can’t accomplish this, art must help.
“You
note, for example, that a good Googie architect has no fear of starting
a heavy stone wall directly over a glass-filled void. Taking his cue
from store front designers, he laughs at anybody whom this might make
uncomfortable. He knows that nothing need appear to rest on anything
else, least of all on the earth; in Googie architecture both the glass
and the stone are conceived to float. It is strictly an architecture up
in the air.
“Another Googie tenet is that just as three
architectural themes mixed together are better than one, so two or three
structural systems mixed together add to the interest of the occasion.”
“What about materials?”
“Ah,
yes. You may have noted how they have multiplied in modern
architecture. First only three materials were considered truly modern:
steel, concrete and glass – especially glass. Now look at them all!
Redwood and asbestos cement and glass block and plastics and plywood and
more and more and more and more orchard stone! Need I expand the list?
But Googie as I have said treats all issues with generous abandon. ‘Why
throw the coal into the furnace?’ it asks. ‘Why not into the wall? Why
not build with string? Why not use anything?…”
“What about equipment?” quickly interrupted the student.
“Same
freedom. To the inventions of the modern engineer, Googie adds all of
Popular Mechanics. Walls that are hinged and roll out on casters, doors
that disappear into the ground, overhead lights that cook the
hamburger…”
“Stop! Wait!” cried the despairing student. “Just where in the name of Apollo can all this uninhibited incoherence lead?”
“Ah,
well you might ask,” meditated Thrugg, stroking his chin. “Well you
might ask. Modern architecture has set building free. For every one good
way of building that there used to be, there are now three new ones,
with more coming around the corner.
"Almost anything can be done
and is being done – so what is there for young fellows trying to live up
to The Fountainhead to do except create this spicy Googie goulash? Even
so, they have brought modern architecture down from the mountains and
set ordinary clients, ordinary people, free.”
“Is that good – having the people free?”
“No
and yes. No, because the people have neither the education nor leaders
to guide them. Caught between numbskull appraisers of the FHA on one
side and Googie geniuses on the other, how can they know their way?
There are no responsible critics in the middle!
“But again, yes,
it is good, and for two reasons. One is that sometimes fantastically
good ideas result from uninhibited experiment. The other is that Googie
accustoms the people to expect strangeness, and make them the readier
for those strange things yet to come which will truly make good sense.”
Thrugg paused.
“Let me tell you a story. One hundred years ago in
Spain was born a strange genius, Antoni Gaudi. He built cathedral
towers that resembled weird plants and shocked everybody. Gaudi and his
friends were interested in reproducing the more superficial appearance
of nature – the beautiful lines of waves, the ever sensitive contours of
leaves.
But Gaudi got people accustomed to looking away from
the immediate past and toward nature. Soon a more deeply searching
generation came. Beneath the changing leaves of plants they discerned
the ever constant and ever geometric law of each plant’s growth; and
beneath the changing waves the ever constant operations of dynamics.
When their buildings were reading, applying these new principles,
Gaudi’s fantastic strangeness had helped prepare the ground for this
sensible strangeness.
“So something better than accidental
discoveries might come even from Googie. It’s too bad our taste is so
horrible; but it’s pretty good to have men free….”
I think it is a very cool style of architecture and always get a kick out of discovering a place that hasn't changed its look. There is a Denney's about half a mile from me that is classic Googie!
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