Leisurama Now: The Beach House for Everyone 1964- | 
| Author: Paul Sahre Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press Category: Book
List Price: $40.00 Buy New: $23.89 You Save: $16.11 (40%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 74217
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4 Dimensions (in): 10 x 7.4 x 1.1
ISBN: 1568987099 Dewey Decimal Number: 728.720974725 EAN: 9781568987095 ASIN: 1568987099
Publication Date: March 20, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Few left in stock - order soon. Code: H20080716212310T
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Product Description
"It was the ultimate turnkey operation?down to the color-coordinated toothbrushes in the bathroom. All you needed were your clothes and a six-pack" ?Frank Tauma, Montauk real estate broker Who doesn't dream of owning a second home at the beach? Well, in the early 1960s, it was a snap even for the working class. For as little as $590 down and $73/month, you could walk into Macy?s and leave with a fully furnished house. All you needed to move in was a key and some groceries. Each house came complete with furniture, appliances, a 45-piece Melmac dinner service and plastic glasses, fifty pieces of stainless steel flatware, plus towels, napkins, placemats, beds, pillows and sheets, even toothbrushes. The homes also promised low maintenance with redwood siding and interior paneling that never needed painting and had lifetime guarantees. In Leisurama, author Paul Sahre uncovers the mystery of this legendary slice of architectural Americana and lovingly documents its forty year history with a treasure trove of text, photographs, historical documentation, and oral histories.
The houses came in two basic models. The smaller version, the Convertible, was basically a studio: 730 square feet of open plan with a sofa bed plus a fold-down Murphy bed. A folding mahogany screen allowed the owner to divide the "living room" from the "study." The larger model, the Expanded Convertible, was 950 square feet, supposedly capable of sleeping eight and included two or more bathrooms. Two hundred and fifty of these houses were built at Culloden Shores in Montauk, Long Island with several hundred more built in an area near Fort Lauderdale, FL. Most of the homes have since been converted to year-round occupancy, and with very few exceptions, all have been enlarged and redecorated, while the once barren shore is now forested. In a sweet paradox, these once very affordable homes that were looked down upon by more well to do neighbors are now desirable and expensive, even "collectable." Their rich legacy lives on in the affordable pages of Leisurama.
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| Customer Reviews:
An Extraordinary Journey July 5, 2008 Paul Sahre has done it again. This book is a visual tour de force and important contribution to the legacy of the Leisurama era. It is gorgeously designed, rigorously researched and a truly wonderful read.
Cool Beach Book July 1, 2008 I lived on eastern Long Island 50 years and never heard of Leisurama Homes till I saw a PBS tv special two years ago. I took a ride to Montauk and found this development very interesting. The book is nicely done with tons of color photos and alot of history which i like along with then and now photos. You can tell the author did the utmost in research for this book. Highly recommended.
Shiny Americana June 8, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book can be appreciated for both its design aesthetics and its telling of Montauk history. Leisurama tells how people lived and continue to live in their environments, which are these pre-packaged homes. The fun part is the book's layout which jumps timelines and stories, comparing what was then and how it has transformed now. We need more than old radios or televisions or wood paneling to express the 60's and the generation of idealism. Which makes Leisurama a fun and strange book. There are too many things in this world that we will never know of because we lose interest and move on. Here we have an opportunity to obsess over the author's obsession and be part of a history that is still very much alive.
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