1965, Northern California, House
241 Moonraker Dr., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
A small square house, which internally is a house within a house (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 388; 467; 474).
1965, Northern California, Sea Ranch Corp.
NE side Annapolis Rd., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
No comment (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 387).
1966, Northern California, House
S side Crow's Nest Dr., W of junction with Moonraker Rd., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
No comment (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 388).
1966, Northern California, House
273 Moonraker Dr., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
No comment (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 388; 467; 474).
1966, Northern California, Swim and Tennis Club #1
N side Moonraker Rd., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW); Supergraphics by Barbara Stauffacher
An impressive example of design, site planning and supergraphics realized in one building of very modest cost (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 386).
1966, North Bay, Budge house
Healdsburg
Moore and Turnbull
The Budge house, near Healdsburg on a knoll studded with oaks, adapts a regular plan to the classical rectangular format of the simple California farmhouse. An innovation here, in a vacation house for the long, hot, dry, and drowsy summers (which are in full contrast to the brisk summer months in San Francisco), is a set of overhead doors which turn three-quarters of the house, into a screened porch. Again, a simple notion is employed at a surprising scale, to reconnect with the diagram, while inside, as in a barn, the space expands into the reaches under the hipped roof, with a drawbridge across the center at the upper level to develop elements of mystery and remoteness (for the area beyond the bridge) in this simple finite box (Woodbridge 1988: 290-91).
1966-73, Northern California, Kresge College
UC Campus, Santa Cruz
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
No comment (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 487).
1966-68, Northern California, Villa del Monte
Seaside
Moore and Turnbull
On the whole most of these projects are perfectly adequate examples of urban renewal, but they look a little pallid beside the really successful low cost housing project, Villa del Monte, designed by Moore and Turnbull (MLTW) (1966-68). The Villa del Monte illustrates that even with stringent financial and other limitations, a distinguished piece of architecture can be produced within the confines of a low cost housing program (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 477).
1967, Northern California, House
Hwy 1, SW of junction with Yardarm Dr., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
A small but highly complex series of shed roofed volumes (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 385).
1967, Northern California, Sylvia Corp. Yards
NE of Timber Ridge Rd., Sea Ranch
Moore and Turnbull (MLTW)
No comment (Gebhard, Winter, and Sandweiss 1985: 387).