June 2021 Mod of the Month

Houston Mod invites you to join us this Sunday, June 27th for a Mod of the Month open house event from 1:00-4:00 PM.

Masks are required to be worn for this event.
Please resist touching surfaces and maintain 6 feet of social distancing 

Please help find a new preservation-minded owner for this vintage modern houses in the Tanglewood area, located approximately 10 miles west of downtown Houston.

5710 Indian Circle Street, Indian Trail Section 3, Houston, TX 77057
HAR Link  | Google Map

Records show this eye-catching and well situated vintage modern house was built in 1971 by John Knerr for Dawson Sterling of American General Life Insurance Company. It is an early example (for Houston) of Shed Style architecture which began at Sea Ranch in 1965. Features of the Shed Style include seamless roof to wall intersections, overall asymmetry with strong lines, recessed main entrance and a one to two story height.  Passive solar design elements like masonry flooring and stone walls were incorporated on the more innovative examples.

Prolific mid-century architect Lucian Hood, Jr. is credited with designing this house which shows little relation to his earlier modern works. By this point in his career he designed mostly traditionally styled houses.  While still in school at the University of Houston, Hood worked for architect Philip Willard who had a large office and employed other Hood classmates such as Lars Bang, the Brooks brothers, the Flynn twins, and A. Carroll Brodnax.  They gleefully attempted upstaging their architecture professor Howard Barnstone in the field whenever possible.  Hood later partnered with Lars Bang where they designed and built several office buildings for Kenneth Schnitzer.  Later Hood established his own firm where he worked mostly alone but sometimes with his son Lucian T. Hood who is an architect now working in the Los Angeles area.  Lucian Hood, Jr. had tremendous graphic abilities and created captivating architecture. His extensive archives are now preserved, facilitated in part by Houston Mod, at the University of Houston Special Collections library.