Selleh House - Tempe Arizona
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member sundevil1994
N 33° 25.036 W 111° 56.413
12S E 412582 N 3697942
The Selleh Residence is significant for its association with custom neighborhood development in Tempe before 1950 and for its association with the Selleh Family, one of the community’s prominent families at the post-war era.
Waymark Code: WMAJ0Y
Location: Arizona, United States
Date Posted: 01/19/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member silverquill
Views: 5

Information from the Tempe Historic Preservation NRHP site:

Designed by prominent Tempe architect Kemper Goodwin in 1940, the Selleh Residence is an excellent example of a custom home wherein various stylistic influences in vogue during the transitional pre-war era are successfully resolved into an overall cohesive design. Borrowing tenets from as diverse a range of styles as California Ranch, Moderne, and Spanish Colonial Revival, Goodwin infused this hybrid with his own brand of regionalism and with simple massing of clean planes and basic forms to produce a one-of-a-kind custom home with a strong sense of architectural design.

Kemper Goodwin was born in Tempe, Arizona on April 28, 1906. He received his architectural training at the University of Southern California and was licensed to practice architecture in Arizona in 1931. After several years working for Valley firms, he established his own practice in Tempe. Over the next thirty years his architectural firm, which eventually expanded to 40 employees, became one of the most successful in the state. Specializing in educational facilities, Kemper Goodwin is often recognized for having set the design standard for this type of building in the state. Prominent among his more than 200 public educational buildings in Arizona, were those designed for Arizona State University. The Memorial Union, Wilson Hall, and Mathematics Building represent a few of the more notable Goodwin buildings on campus. Joined by his son Michael in 1967, Kemper Goodwin continued to practice architecture until 1975 when he retired. He died December 24, 1997.

The period immediately before the war finds Kemper among many successful American architects searching to sustain the honest and rational design expression popular towards the end of that era of stark functionality called the “Moderne Movement 1920-1940”. True modern architecture on the cusp of World War II was responding to a myriad of social and cultural vagaries rampant at the verge of the nuclear age. Buildings devoid of ornament, with plane surfaces and the latest in plate-glass windows wrapping around elevations were about to yield to the more organic and contextual influences of the so-called “Wrightian Movement 1940-1960”. That Frank Lloyd Wright would go on inspiring architects young and old for generations is still evident. But what of young Kemper? The custom home at 1104 South Mill Avenue seems to draw the best from many stylistic influences. The integrity of Wright’s organic philosophy carries forward in the simple massing and bold planes of this functional design - rendered here in a pallet of regionally appropriate materials including unfinished brick masonry which combines with the full-hip tile roof to create a structure comprehensible from the street yet eminently approachable and comfortable in its human scale at intimate distances.

The mature landscape at the back of the Selleh Residence is typical for Park Tract homes fronting on Mill Avenue. The character of the nearby flood-irrigated yards and dense landscaping throughout the subdivision has its fragile edge at the arterial street. The building provides a positive contribution to the historic character along Mill Avenue and a preview of, and transition to, the historic Park Tract subdivision, now known as the Maple-Ash Neighborhood.
Street address:
1104 S. Mill Ave
Tempe, AZ


County / Borough / Parish: Maricopa

Year listed: 2005

Historic (Areas of) Significance: Person, Architecture/Engineering

Periods of significance: 1940, 1941

Historic function: Domestic Single Dwelling

Current function: Domestic Single Dwelling

Privately owned?: yes

Primary Web Site: [Web Link]

Season start / Season finish: Not listed

Hours of operation: Not listed

Secondary Website 1: Not listed

Secondary Website 2: Not listed

National Historic Landmark Link: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Please give the date and brief account of your visit. Include any additional observations or information that you may have, particularly about the current condition of the site. Additional photos are highly encouraged, but not mandatory.
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