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"Although I
wasn't looking for a home at that time, when I saw a For Sale sign
in front, I decided without hesitation that this was the only place
I could live in Southern California," he says. "Oaklawn was a magnificent
turn-of-the-century neighborhood that had been mostly preserved,
and it still retained its unique character. I bought the house with
the interior sight unseen." Never mind that that interior was 3,800
square feet and Magilligan, a soon-to-be-retired single accountant,
already owned a condo in San Francisco, a second home in Marin and
a converted schoolhouse in Napa. He sold them all, moved down to
South Pasadena and became smitten with all things Greene and Greene.
It was an established
fact that brothers Henry and Charles Greene had designed the South
Pasadena subdivision's layout, entry portals, border fence, and
a few years later, a footbridge and waiting station. Neighborhood
legend had it that four of the Arts and Crafts houses were unattributed
Greene and Greenes. But Magilligan wanted to know more, and began
researching the history of his neighbors' homes. This led to a year
of talking with professional and amateur historians, and digging
through various archives in search of the Greene and Greene connection
he grew to be certain was there. Ultimately, he compiled an illustrated
45-page document on his findings, which he hopes will prompt architectural
scholars to delve even deeper
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In 1904
Charles and Henry Greene began working with the South Pasadena
Realty and Investment Company to develop an existing orange
grove into a "Suburb de Luxe," as a 1907 brochure
trumpeted. The street was 75' wide to accommodate an impressive
old oak, and the architects designed two distinctive cobblestone
portals to frame the tree from the development's entrance.
Cobblestone-and-clinker-brick seating surrounded the tree,
which was intended as a neighborhood meeting place.
Magilligan
found a 1905 Pasadena Tournament of Roses publication touting
the charms of Oaklawn in an ad, with a Charles Greene article,
"California Home Making," just a few pages prior.
Greene's illustrations accompanied the feature text, and included
a painting of an entrance portal just like the ones that lead
into Oaklawn.
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"Charles
Greene wrote, 'Under the foothills is a beautiful spot, overlooking
the valley to the south, a quiet nook just above a grove of wide
and spreading live oaks. North are the sloping vineyards and the
mountains rising high above.' This is a description of Oaklawn,"
Magilligan says with conviction.

The Greenes
were not commissioned to design the first four houses in the development,
all of which were impressive, costly homes. But they were hired
to build a bridge from the promontory of the neighborhood down to
Fair Oaks Avenue, perhaps in an effort to make the location more
appealing to middle-class buyers who would need to commute to work.
The bridge spanned two railroad tracks on the east side of the Oaklawn
development, and connected the homes to Fair Oaks' streetcar service
and the adjacent Raymond Hotel and its golf course. The design that
was selected was modern and built from a relatively new product:
reinforced concrete. It included a cobblestone waiting station with
a tile roof on the Fair Oaks end. Soon after it was finished in
1906, the bridge developed cracks and the railroads insisted that
an additional pillar be installed, much to the architects' chagrin.
"I first
began researching the Greenes in 1954," says Randall Makinson,
director emeritus of the Gamble House, "and shortly thereafter
met some of the Greene family, including Henry's daughter, Isabelle.
One of the first stories she and her husband told me was that the
saddest thing in Henry's life was the bridge. He took such great
pride in it, and for the extra column to have to go in, that just
crushed him, she said. Every time I saw her over the next 30 to
40 years, that story would get retold. Henry just talked about it
all of his life.
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"There
is a photo from the family that shows sandbags on the bridge
and the tests that were done proving that it was sound,"
Makinson says. "The Greenes believed in it, yet the railroads
controlled everything, and they had to yield to the railroads'
wishes. It was the third reinforced-concrete bridge in the
U.S., the second in California and the first designed by an
architect. They had every reason to be very proud.
"The
Greenes showed the world that concrete could be a graceful
construction material. The increasing spans -- the first is
small, the next larger, and so on -- are a beautiful sculptural
composition," he says.
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The bridge
stood with its extra support for 90-plus years, then in 2002,
the city of South Pasadena undertook a restoration of the structure.
"When it came time to restore the bridge for a coming Metroline
project, the city had the vision and the courage to have it
checked by engineers and to form a committee to see to the accurate
restoration," Makinson, a member of the committee, comments.
"They
replaced the missing back and seat in the waiting station
-- which someone had previously decided should become a gateway
into the small park that adjoins it. I've noticed that people
are sitting there now, waiting for the bus, which was its
original intent and function. And interestingly, the contractors
who removed the extra column found that there was an inch
of separation between the added column and the bridge; it
never was being held up by it."
The Oaklawn
bridge committee had to consider things like the grit of the
sand in the original concrete, as well as the color and texture
-- all to make sure that the repaired sections matched perfectly.
The ingredients for the paving on top of the bridge went through
the same process. "Everybody, from the contractors on
down, listened carefully to the committee's suggestions,"
Makinson says. "When missing segments of the railing
had to be put in, they went to the extreme to get the planks
that made up the concrete forms to be the same size and go
in the same direction as when the bridge was built."
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Wrought-iron
lighting fixtures for both ends of the bridge were designed
by the Greenes but never installed. The drawings for the four
lanterns that were intended for the obelisk on the Fair Oaks
side were found recently by Edward Bosley, director of the
Gamble House.
"I
uncovered the drawing of the unexecuted light fixture from
among the Oaklawn drawings at Columbia University's Avery
Library," Bosley says. "It is not a Craftsman design
to be sure, but is nonetheless simple, dignified and wholly
appropriate to the base on which it was meant to be affixed.
The obelisk base itself is more forward-looking and unabashedly
modern than the Greenes' typical work, but so is the bridge,
as it should be, especially when we consider that it is one
of the very first reinforced concrete bridges in the United
States."
With the
removal of the offending support, the bridge looks much as
it did in 1906. "The Greene family is delighted with
the renovation," Makinson reports. "They said, 'Grandpa
would finally be happy!'"
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In 1907
a financial downturn caused various sections of Oaklawn to
be sold to other developers, including G.W. Stimson, who had
found that to "maximize profits, it was best to sell
a lot with a home constructed on it," according to Magilligan's
manuscript. "At this time, the construction process was
difficult ... and financing was not available to individuals
constructing residences. However, a completed home and lot
could be readily financed with a mortgage. Alternatively,
a buyer wanting to construct his own home was more inclined
to purchase a lot if plans were included."
Magilligan
believes that Stimson hired the Greene and Greene firm to
design six homes on Oaklawn in an attempt to bolster sales
and present the public with architect-designed houses that
would justify the high-priced lots. It is established that
the Greenes did take on the interior design of one of the
earlier spec houses, and Magilligan sees numerous similarities
between its interior and those of the unattributed homes.
The six
houses were considered moderately priced, ranging between
$5,000 and $12,000. Each was different from the others and
designed for its specific location. Magilligan's research
concludes that Stimson was required to use Peter Hall as the
contractor, the same builder who constructed the gateways
and fences surrounding Oaklawn, and that the Greenes' involvement
was over once the plans for "Oaklawn Series IVI"
were drawn.
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