Loving Lustrons
Like the Edsel or New Coke, all-steel Lustron houses were a marketing idea that never fully caught on. Yet nearly 60 years after their brief run, a community of Lustron aficionados is working to save these distinct and quirky buildings.
BY KIM A. O'CONNELL
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Five of the endangered Lustrons
at Quantico Marine Corps Base, Va.
(Cameron Davidson)
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It's early on a hot morning in
May 2006, and Frank Phillips is already cursing. Standing
inside a nearly gutted house in Arlington, Va., sweat
darkening his long hair and white T-shirt, he casts
a weary glance at the wall frames and ceiling panels
yet to be dismantled. For three weeks, Phillips and
his colleagues from Capstone Properties, a local construction
firm, have been systematically disassembling the structure
so it can be stored and reassembled later. I'm
there as a board member of the Arlington Heritage
Alliance (AHA), a volunteer group, to document the
day's progress in a logbook. AHA had placed the
house and a half-dozen others like it on its annual
most-endangered list two years running, and we had
supported the disassembly as part of a long effort
to save the dwelling from demolition.
It hasn't been easy. The crew had taken the manual
used to erect the house in 1949 and worked backward,
but it didn't account for such unexpected issues
as rust and asbestos. Looping a facemask over my ears,
I step carefully around the piles of fiberglass insulation
and loose screws on the floor to join Phillips in
what was once the living room. Pointing toward the
roof, he notes that it has taken multiple cans of
WD-40 to loosen the dozens of rusty screws and wing
nuts holding the cement board asbestos panels in place.
"This [bleep] fights you every step of the way,"
he says. "These houses were definitely overconstructed.
They were built to be tornado proof."
The object of this determined toil was a Lustron.
Called "the house America's been waiting
for," Lustrons were prefabricated, porcelain-enameled
steel residences manufactured after World War II to
house returning veterans, government workers, and
middle-class families. For a brief shining moment,
the weather-resistant, vermin-proof, virtually maintenance-free
houses caused a national sensation that captivated
booming families and reached all the way to Capitol
Hill. Lustrons were built in at least 32 states and
the District of Columbia. Yet the company that produced
them erected fewer than 3,000 before declaring bankruptcy
in 1950. Today, the small two- and three-bedroom houses
have become teardown targets, and only 1,200 to 1,500
are thought to remain, in various states of preservation.
In Arlington, Lustrons have been demolished with astonishing
rapidity. Just this April, a developer leveled a blue-and-yellow
model, allowing no time for anyone to rescue it. Only
four of the county's original 11 Lustrons remain
intact.
For more of this article, look for the
July/August 2007 issue on newsstands or e-mail
us to purchase a copy.
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