Bay City, Michigan 48706
Front Page 04/19/2024 19:19 About us
www.mybaycity.com July 26, 2003
(Prior Story)   Community ArTicle 243   (Next Story)

Bay City's Architectural Treasures Highlight American Bungalow Magazine

Dale Wolicki, Todd Dore, Put National Spotlight on Cottage-Style Ready-Cuts

July 26, 2003       Leave a Comment
By: Dave Rogers

Printer Friendly Story View

American Bungalow Magazine contains wealth of nostalgia of urban idealism as well as advice for new wanna-be bungalow homeowners.
 

We drive past them every day, paying little attention.

Perhaps we visit their owners, but are not aware of them.

They are part of the scenery, little blips on the landscape.

But they are much more significant that we realize. They are the subject of an entire magazine.



"They" are bungalows. WHAT? BUNGALOWS!

Please define that.

Webster's says "a small, one-storied house or cottage."

Bay City is full of them, bungalows that is, many produced by the several so-called "ready-cut" home companies which operated here from the early 1900s until the 1960s.

Just published is the Summer 2003 issue of, believe it or not, American Bungalow magazine, a slick 144 page quarterly coming out of Sierra Madre, California.

This publication is a treasure for the brand of urban sophisticates and metropolitan mavens who favor traditional mid-American Cleaver-style towns with tree-lined streets fronting endless rows of single-family cottages.

Bay City is that kind of town and we wouldn't have it any other way. And, by the way, Bay City, a center of innovation in several other technological areas also, may aptly be considered the wellspring of mainstream homebuilding nationally because of firms like Aladdin, Lewis-Liberty and Sterling.

Our guru of architectural technology, Dale Wolicki, has teamed with a homeowner, Todd Dore, to document Bay City's contribution to the "Leave It To Beaver" lifestyle of the nation. Their article, replete with photos from old catalogs and the streets of Bay City, is alliteratively entitled "Aladdin Homes: Comfortable, Convenient and Cozy." The subtitle is "Bay City, Mich., is a treasure of kit-built homes."

And that it is, for certain.The world will soon beat a path to our doors to see our architectural treasures if Mr. Wolicki has anything to say about it. His article documents Bay City's part in the Arts and Crafts movement of the early 1900s. With help from Todd and Ann Dore and well-known local photographer Wes Stafford, Wolicki documents a previously-little known fact that the only Rossley home featured in the 1916 Aladdin catalog is located on the corner of Johnson and Sixth streets in Bay City. It is owned by the Dores, arts and crafts collectors, who have restored the home and filled it with Stickley furniture and period collectibles.



Printer Friendly Story View
Prior Article

February 10, 2020
by: Rachel Reh
Family Winter Fun Fest is BACC Hot Spot for 2/10/2020
Next Article

February 2, 2020
by: Kathy Rupert-Mathews
MOVIE REVIEW: "Just Mercy" ... You Will Shed Tears, or at Least You Should
Agree? or Disagree?


Dave Rogers

Dave Rogers is a former editorial writer for the Bay City Times and a widely read,
respected journalist/writer in and around Bay City.
(Contact Dave Via Email at carraroe@aol.com)

More from Dave Rogers

Send This Story to a Friend!       Letter to the editor       Link to this Story
Printer-Friendly Story View


--- Advertisments ---
     


0200 Nd: 04-15-2024 d 4 cpr 0






12/31/2020 P3v3-0200-Ad.cfm

SPONSORED LINKS



12/31/2020 drop ads P3v3-0200-Ad.cfm


Designed at OJ Advertising, Inc. (V3) (v3) Software by Mid-Michigan Computer Consultants
Bay City, Michigan USA
All Photographs and Content Copyright © 1998 - 2024 by OJA/MMCC. They may be used by permission only.
P3V3-0200 (1) 0   ID:Default   UserID:Default   Type:reader   R:x   PubID:mbC   NewspaperID:noPaperID
  pid:1560   pd:11-18-2012   nd:2024-04-15   ax:2024-04-19   Site:5   ArticleID:243   MaxA: 999999   MaxAA: 999999
Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)