GROPIUS HOUSE

  • Walter Gropius, 1938
  • 68 Baker Bridge Rd #3105, Lincoln, MA 01773

Walter Gropius was the founder of the German design school Bauhaus. When the Nazis closed the Bauhaus in 1933, Gropius fled Germany, first to London, then to the United States in 1937 to accept a teaching position at Harvard's Graduate School of Design.

Gropius, his wife Ise, and their adopted daughter Ati arrived in America with little more than their Bauhaus furniture, books, and personal belongings. They initially rented a Colonial-style house in Lincoln, Massachusetts, but as Ise later wrote, their Bauhaus furniture looked strange in the small rooms of this little house. When architect friend Henry Shepley learned that the new German professor was desperate to build a house but lacked the means, he approached philanthropist Helen Storrow. She believed newly arrived immigrants should always be given a chance, offering Gropius a building site and financial resources.

Working with local builder Casper J. Jenney and approximately $18,000, Gropius designed the house in 1937 and completed it in 1938. He carefully chose a modest hill in the middle of Storrow's apple orchard. The design combines traditional New England materials like wood, brick, and fieldstone with industrial materials rarely used in domestic settings: glass block, acoustical plaster, welded steel, and chrome banisters.

Modest in scale at 2,936 square feet, the house was revolutionary in impact. Gropius gave his 12 year old daughter Ati substantial input in designing her bedroom, including a warm color palette and furniture he had designed at the Bauhaus in 1922. She had three wishes: to sleep under the stars, to come and go from her own private entryway, and to have a special play space. The outdoor spiral staircase leading to her room with its private roof deck fulfilled these dreams. The house features a flat roof with a slight tilt to drain water to a center pipe and dry well. Gropius's vision attracted other modern architects to the area, including Marcel Breuer, who built on nearby Woods End Road. Today, Lincoln has over 300 modern movement homes.

In keeping with Bauhaus philosophy, every aspect of the house and surrounding landscape was planned for maximum efficiency and simplicity. Large plate glass windows bring the outdoors in while permitting solar gain. The house contains furniture designed by Marcel Breuer. Guests at the Gropiuses' dinner table included Alexander Calder, Joan Miró, Igor Stravinsky, Henry Moore, and Frank Lloyd Wright.

Walter Gropius died in 1969, leaving Ise a two-sentence will stating that he loved her and trusted her with his legacy. Ise donated the house to Historic New England in 1974, though she continued to live there until her death in 1983. The home became a museum in 1984, and in 2000 it was designated a National Historic Landmark. The house now features one of the largest collections of Bauhaus-related materials outside of Germany and is open for tours.