May 10, 2016

50 Clifton Dr, Westlake District, Daly City Little Boxes Series


1,080 square foot 2 bedroom 1 bath Classic Midcentury style home built in 1952. Last sold for $154K in 1986. Brand spanking new this house cost about $9K. Current estimates value the property at about $727K.

The Westlake District of Daly City, California, is one of America’s earliest and most iconic postwar suburbs. Located just south of San Francisco, Westlake has frequently been compared to Levittown, New York, the first major postwar suburb in the United States.

Developed by Henry Doelger, once the largest home builder in the nation, Westlake features quirky 1950s architecture created by a core team of designers to encompass nearly every building in the development. Westlake’s most famous architectural icons are its endless rows of boxy houses—the inspiration for Malvina Reynolds’ folk song Little Boxes which became an anti-suburban anthem in the 1960s.

Despite its detractors, Westlake has enjoyed considerable praise over the course of its sixty-year history. In the 1950s, the neighborhood’s architecturally innovative schools began appearing in national magazines like Life, Architectural Forum, and Fortune. In the 1970’s, one national magazine named Westlake one of the ten best suburbs in America. In 2003, The New York Times ran an article about Henry Doelger and his impact on history, citing Westlake as one of his most iconic neighborhoods.

Recognition of Westlake’s architects and its status as an important postwar development has gained momentum in recent years due to a resurgence of exposure in newspapers, magazines, and books. (Westlake Resource)