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Peeking through the Keyhole: The Evolution of North American Homes

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With today's instant communication, the way we observe other people, other cultures, and other times has altered, and been altered by, the homes we live in. Avi Friedman and David Krawitz guide the reader through the trends and changes that have influenced residential design and construction over the last fifty years. From kitchens to home offices to entire neighbourhoods, they unravel the effect of technology and consumerism on the way we perceive and use domestic space, arguing that the home is no longer a product of pure design but a response to factors and forces beyond the control of designers, builders, and users. Each chapter approaches the theme of home from a different vantage the first three chapters focus on food and kitchens, communication, construction and renovation; the middle chapters deal with childhood and aging; and the final chapters examine our ideas of home in the context of the broader community and as an object of commerce. The authors demonstrate how much life has changed in the years following the Second World War, showing how transformations in society, the economy, and lifestyles are reflected in our homes.

200 pages, Paperback

First published August 29, 2002

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Avi Friedman

48 books3 followers

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Jen Myles.
12 reviews
March 29, 2021
This is an interesting book with lots of salient information, but it was published in 2002 and its age shows in a lot of aspects. Fun points made about the Baby Boomers in it though, a lot of which have been proven true now. I wish there were an updated edition.
72 reviews2 followers
February 15, 2024
I absolutely loved it and couldn’t stop reading it and need more of it please
Profile Image for Erika RS.
878 reviews271 followers
September 21, 2018
This book discusses many of the ways in which the home has changed in the last 50ish years. Unlike many books which focus mainly on architecture and personal anecdotes, this book bases its analysis on sociological studies and real statistics about how homes have changed.

Many of the changes in the home are driven by changes in the structure of households. Households are becoming increasingly less traditional. Although the nuclear family still exists, it generally has a smaller number of children than in the past. Non-traditional households are increasing. This includes single parents, couple with no children and co-habitating couples (with or without children). These factors lead to a traditional home being less suitable than in the past for many households. For example, single adults and couples without children do not require the same amount or type of space as households with children.

Baby boomers have also contributed to the changing housing needs in North America. The baby boomers helped drive the increase in housing size even as they had less children (houses are, on average, twice as larger now as they were just after WWII; to be fair, just after WWII houses were smaller than they were before then). These changing expectations of what a house should be has had a dramatic effect on both housing design and land usage.

As baby boomers age, they continue to have an effect. Now they are driving the need for retirement housing including nursing homes, retirement communities, and adaptation of existing houses to aging residents. The second and third forms of housing are particularly significant; they allow older members of society to live independently or with minimal help. This independence marks a change from the past when aging parent were more likely to depend on their children for care in their old age.

The changing role of technology in the home cannot be ignored. One of the largest changes over the past 50ish years has been the decentralization of technology in the home. The first phones were centralized and lacked privacy. The first radios (and the first TVs after them) provided a family gathering point. Since then, technology has moved out of the living room and into the bedroom. In many homes, it is not unusual for there to be about one phone, TV, DVD player, music playback device, even computer per person. Although technology has had some effect on the structure of the home itself, the larger impact has been on the use of the home. The big fancy TV in the living room may be rarely used because everyone prefers the privacy of consuming alone. What is hard to say is whether this decentralization of technology is a cause or effect of the degrading quality of family interactions over the past 50ish years.

The authors reserve their greatest criticism for the evolution of the suburbs and the accompanying evolution of the home from a place to live to a consumer product. The suburbs, according to the author fail as a good place to live because they lack any sense of human scale. It is impossible to live in the suburbs without a car because they are not designed to be walkable (if they can be said to be designed at all). They discourage interaction between neighbors because the houses are set so far back from the street.

As people become less attached to their community, they become less attached to their home, making the community less stable and people in the community even more unlikely to interact. Rather than moving into a home and then adapting it to fit their needs, they move as soon as they feel they need something different about their home. When in a home, there is a desire to make it "look right". Fashions come and go, adding expenses and decreasing pleasure in the home. These fashions are not limited to small things like throw pillows and the pictures on the walls. Non-functional remodels of homes and frequent replacement of furniture have become much more common than in the past.

This book provides a good balance to other books I have read that have taken a more theoretical look at the home or have failed to look deeply at modern home use (no one ever mentions where the TV should go). It is, for the most part, descriptive rather than prescriptive, so I think that there is still opportunity to integrate these ideas with the more prescriptive ideas of other books I have read. However, it certainly provides much of the data that would be necessary for that synthesis.
Profile Image for Lisalou.
135 reviews
January 22, 2011
Interesting if a little dry. Makes a strong case for the need to not feel that we've failed if we move towards smaller, more compact homes. Also, makes a strong case to stop viewing the purchase of a home as "the biggest investment" you'll ever make but really as "the biggest purchase" you'll ever make. In viewing it that way one can be more amenable to more diverse neighborhoods rather than the feeling of needing to protect your investment from the "riff raff".
17 reviews2 followers
March 8, 2008
Interesting book. Avi goes through the transition of homes as basic shelter to huge living rooms and way too much space.
293 reviews5 followers
May 7, 2010
This was interesting, but not nearly as comprehensive as I was hoping it would be.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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