The architect wanted to create social housing in Los Angeles. Dogged by the FBI, his hope for more egalitarian architecture never came to be. — The Nation
Does it surprise you that an architect dedicating his life's work for better housing for the working classes would be declared, with the pressure of the real estate industry and communism scare, a public enemy and had the FBI trying really hard to discriminate against him for years?
That architect is Gregory Ain, who developed attainable methods of egalitarian housing solutions and the architecturally beautiful examples he designed and seen them built. His illustrious but low-key career spanned from working for Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra, collaborating with the Eames to figure out the plywood chair molds they famously produced, being awarded a Guggenheim on the advice of Walter Gropius and Mies van der Rohe, working with landscape architect Garrett Eckbo on the housing projects, to teaching at USC and Penn State and later ironically "retiring" from architecture.
This is a well-worth reading article by Kate Wolf, who is able to detail Ain's progressive housing and ownership models, including quotes from Esther McCoy to Anthony Fontenot, who recently wrote a book on Ain's housing work, Notes From Another Los Angeles, and other historians and writers. I like the quote by one of his associates, "Ain stated that he wanted to address common architectural problems of common people.”
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