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Dueling Visions: Six Moon Hill and Twin Palms "Early Midcentury Modern Communities on the East and West Coasts"

Six Moon Hill near Boston is celebrated as an early midcentury enclave as is Twin Palms in Palm Springs, CA. Architects and experts in MCM restoration, Colin Flavin and Tim Techler, compare them.

$15 (1 hr)

Category: CAMP Theater, Presentation, Talk, Palm Springs

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In the 1950s, architects on both the East and West coasts were enraptured by the goal of building architecture that had a strong relationship to the land. 

In Massachusetts, The Architects Collaborative (TAC) drew inspiration from the rural character of a sloping site in Lexington and built 29 homes that changed New England architecture’s relationship to the land. In Palm Springs, Palmer & Krisel popularized building desert-appropriate homes that appeared custom-built, creating one of the first housing tracts comprised of post and beam midcentury Modern homes in Southern California.

Both firms’ interest in creating architecture built for their respective environments was the same–yet the effect of their built communities was dramatically different.

Colin Flavin, AIA is the founder of Flavin Architects. He directs the design of the firm’s residential projects and has cultivated the firm’s unique design approach of Natural Modernism. Flavin’s designs favor sculpted lines and timeless materials assembled with respect for a building’s sited context. Colin presented at Modernism Week on Restoring midcentury Modern Homes (2023) and East Coast vs West Coast Modernist House Design (2022). He has also spoken at the Architecture Boston Expo and for the Builders/Architects/Designers speaker series.

Tim Techler, AIA is the founder of Techler Desing Group.

flavinarchitects.com  Instagram @flavinarchitects 

$15

Things To KnowAges 13 and older
This is an indoor activity
Wheelchair accessible
Parking and handicap parking available
Seated activity
Restrooms are available
No smoking or e-cigarettes

Important InformationModernism Week Theater is located at the south end of the hotel’s central atrium. Ample free public parking is available.
Enter underground parking at Hyatt on Palm Canyon Drive or in the multi-level public garage across from the Palm Springs Art Museum.
The organizer of this event is Modernism Week CAMP Theater Activity.

Check-in Location Modernism Week Theater @ CAMP 
Hyatt Palm Springs
285 N Palm Canyon Dr
Palm Springs, CA 92262
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Photo Credits: Ezra Stoller, Nat Rea Photography, Colin Flavin {"locationAddressVisibility":"visible"}

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