SAH/SCC members are no strangers to the work and social concepts of Gregory Ain, FAIA (1908-1988). The collected works in this book—including a 64-page portfolio of Julius Shulman photos, scholarly essays, article reprints, and lecture notes from SAH/SCC Co-Founder Esther McCoy (1904-1989)—put Ain’s process of solving “common architectural problems of common people” into its politically liberal context. The book focuses on Ain’s seminal housing projects: Dunsmuir Flats (1937), Park Planned Homes (1947), Avenel Cooperative (1948), Mar Vista Housing (1948), and Community Homes Cooperative (1946-48, unbuilt). Nicholas Olsberg looks at the work and its place in the realm of California Modernism. Former SAH/SCC President Anthony Denzer delves into Ain’s 280-page FBI file when the architect was under surveillance suspected of being a Soviet spy—a fascinating look at the institutionalized paranoia of the McCarthy-era Red Scare. The book includes several writings by Ain, himself. Descriptions of the five projects, including plans and contemporary photos of the built homes, round out this densely packed book. The authors’ timing is apt, as low-income and affordable housing, as well as cooperative living models, are hot topics today. It’s a primer for developers and architects of housing from the innovative design side, and perhaps more importantly, as Fontenot states, “to engage in some of the more difficult questions related to inequality and segregation that continue to shape our cities.”
The MIT Press, 2022, 304 pages, softbound, $49.95