Oregon's coolest midcentury modern houses: Builder Bob Rummer's enduring legacy (photos)

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Traditionalists turned up their noses and scratched their heads when they saw Robert Rummer's wide-open, glass-walled modern homes in the 1960s. The tract developer, now 91, had an uphill battle with banks, building inspectors and home buyers who couldn't see the allure of dwellings designed to encourage then-revolutionary indoor-outdoor living.

But Portlanders who appreciated Frank Lloyd Wright's later work and developer Joseph Eichler's atrium-centered homes in California instantly understood the appeal of soaring living rooms with see-through sliding doors that opened to patios. Many of Rummer's customers stayed put in their homes for decades.

-- Janet Eastman | 503-294-4072

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Today, a Rummer-built house can sell fast. An offer was received in five days after one, built on a half-acre lot at 1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego, was listed in November 2018 at $699,900.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Another 1969 Rummer, on a quarter-acre lot on Southwest Heather Court in Beaverton, sold for $785,000 in August 2018 with an offer accepted after two days.

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

The owners of a 1964 Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

All three properties were listed by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty, who calls Rummer a risk taker who "brought unique, bold home designs to our area, changing the real estate landscape, challenging home buyers to live differently."

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego, listed at $699,900, has a pending offer.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Architecture and housing experts credit Bob Rummer with creating modern homes for middle-class families. He built many of them on spec, without having a down payment from buyers, believing they would sell. He survived good and bad economies; at times, he says he practically gave away a house.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Early believers were doctors and engineers; now many owners are designers. All prefer the spare midcentury modern aesthetic, even if the term didn't exist when they first opened an unassuming front door and entered a sky-revealing courtyard.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Serge A. McCabe | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Is Bob Rummer inside or outside one of the glass-walled homes he built in Beaverton?]

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David Papazian Photography

As children grow up, parents stay behind to live out retirement on a single level.

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

It's not unusual for the second generation to move into a Rummer. As they say, it's hard to live in a house without floor-to-ceiling windows that makes them feel close to nature.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Journalist and Portland Architecture blogger Brian Libby credits Eichler and Rummer with being ahead of their time.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

The concept of a minimum of walls between communal spaces, like the kitchen and dining room, was then uncommon, but prefigured how people would increasingly want to live, he says.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

"Robert Rummer's homes are a time capsule of the 1960s and '70s, and yet they're delightful enough to remain highly coveted," he says.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

"Some Rummer homes I've visited are quite modest while others are more ambitious," says Libby.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

"Some seem dated," says Libby, "and others seem like they could have been designed recently. But every Rummer house is full of natural light, and I think that's why they endure."

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Rummer built modern house from 1962 to 1977, then bent to buying trends and constructed classic revival-style homes for a decade before moving to San Bernardino, California, then Medford, and concentrating his efforts on his mortgage business.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

For a long stretch, many Rummers became rentals and run down. Features that originally made them affordable, like white laminated Formica counters, and "Mad Men" swanky, like paneled walls, looked faded, outdated.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Owners modified them with ornamental frills and updated kitchens, replacing low counters, a swing-out table and ceiling-hung cabinets.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Now, there's a resurgent interest in modern, especially the oxymoron-sounding vintage modern, and owners are restoring Rummers rather than trying to make them something they are not: conventional.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

More than 600 people attended preservation organization Restore Oregon's Rummer home tour in 2016 in Beaverton's Oak Hills Historic District.

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David Papazian Photography

Bob Rummer greets this news with interest. He still owns Rummer Homes Inc. and wonders if there's land in Oregon City or Hillsboro or someplace else to build again. He likes the improved roofing and other materials he could use that didn't exist a half century ago.

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Christopher Barnes/Windermere Realty Trust

He didn't always think he could have another shot.

An earlier Restore Oregon tour brought fans to Rummer's personal residence in Southwest Portland's Bohmann Park tract.

[A nearby 1968 Rummer house on a 7,405-square-foot lot at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. in the Garden Home neighborhood is for sale at $719,000.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

There, under a vaulted ceiling, he stunned the crowd by saying he kept the original tracings for all the houses he built until he moved and tossed out all the tubes.

"I didn't think they were important," he recalls decades later while standing in the living room of his current home in Woodburn.

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Architectural historians can't quit nail down how many modern homes Rummer built in the Portland metro area; some estimate a few hundred, while others say he was responsible for 700 to 750 housing units in Portland, Beaverton, Lake Oswego, Clackamas, Gresham and other places, counting his traditional-style houses.

Bob Rummer will tell you he built 1,000 homes.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

The licensing of the building plans is also muddy. Rummer never met prolific California developer Joseph Eichler, but no one disputes that Rummers are Oregon's Eichlers, many of which were based on plans by architects A. Quincy Jones and Claud Oakland.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Joe Barthlow, a midcentury modern enthusiast, writer, historian and designer living in Eugene, calculates there are about 17 different Rummer models that Eichler built in California years before anything like them appeared in Oregon.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

"Rummer was fascinated with what Eichler was doing in the late '50s in the Bay Area and attempted to duplicate it in the Portland metro area in the early-mid '60s, but on a smaller scale," says Barthlow. "With all of that, we should recognize one fact: these homes were difficult to build and Rummer should get credit for doing so."

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Rummer did meet with one of Eichler's architects, A. Quincy Jones, in 1961. The Los Angeles architect showed Rummer the modern models he had designed in 1957 for Hallberg Homes in Portland.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

More important, Jones tipped Rummer off to the streamlining, cost-cutting secret measurement: With post-and-beam construction, the key is the 6-foot, 4-inch spacing between posts that allows for standardized glass panels and sliding doors.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Rummer paid Jones' travel expenses to Portland and $500 for plans, according to Barthlow's research.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Rummer then hired a young architect to draw up blueprints based on Jones' designs as well as modern home plans printed in Sunset and other magazines.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Despite rumors, there's no evidence that Eichler tried to sue Bob Rummer for copying his plans.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Bob Rummer is surprised by his long-lasting name recognition. He shakes his head and wonders why writers, photographers and design fans still seek him out.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

But after a few self-deprecating asides and laughs with his wife, Phyllis, he announces his ambitions to build tract homes again, but in a way where he could make more money.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

When he sold a house for $25,000 to $32,000 in the 1960s and 1970s, he squeezed out a 5 percent profit, he says, less than the real estate agents' commission.

[This 1969 Robert Rummer-built house, on a quarter-acre lot on Southwest Heather Court in Beaverton, sold for $785,000 in August 2018 with an offer accepted in two days, says listing agent Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Tight margins and the rising cost of building materials often forced him to downgrade finishes; some of his homes had only one "feature wall" of high-end paneling.

But he insisted that exposed beams were made from the center cut so they wouldn't warp, says architectural historian Jack Bookwalter.

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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David Papazian Photography

Rummer "was a hands-on builder, personally selecting materials and overseeing workmanship on each house," says Bookwalter.

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Rooms were organized by tasks. The noise-making kitchen, laundry room and workshop for the water heater and furnace are on one side of the house.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

On another end, the quiet-seeking bedrooms -- three, four or five of them -- and bathrooms.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

In the center is the seemingly never-ending living room, defined by glass walls -- sometimes 18 feet tall -- installed to achieve the modern ideal: To erase boundaries between inside and out.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

When lenders and real estate agents were confused by his concept, Rummer relied on a sales force that could explain the benefits of practical radiant heated floors ...

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

... and splashy Roman-style sunken baths.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

"Now, my houses are selling for $800,000 and more," he says, "and the profit is good. If I put up a new model house, all hell would break loose. I just need investors."

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton  sold for $785,000 in August 2018 with an offer accepted after two days.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Phyllis, 89, is sitting nearby when he proclaims this. His wife of 70 years says he can still recall "every tracing of every [Rummer] house ever drawn."

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

She was the first to call his attention to a new type of tract housing. In 1959, just after completing their so-called "forever" house in a subdivision Rummer created in Newberg, Phyllis saw an Eichler home in Northern California and told her husband that she would trade their new traditional house for a modern one. He replied something like, "I don't want to hear about it."

When retelling the story a few months ago, she quoted him as saying, "Go to hell." They both laughed.

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

A year later, he spotted Eichler homes in Look magazine and he saw an opportunity. He sold his insurance business and opened Rummer Homes.

He remembers feeling hampered by lenders and building codes and being consumed by details. "I'm fussy," he says.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Phyllis proudly says her husband built homes while other people built houses.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Why Rummers?

Like Wright's vision of affordable Usonian homes, as seen in the 1957 Gordon House in Silverton, and A. Quincy Jones' modest dwellings inspired by the experimental Case Study House designs, Rummer saw the appeal of stripping away unneeded interior walls to open up living spaces and to install glass panels that rose to pitched roofs to draw in more natural light.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

A glass-enclosed atrium and skylights embedded in the ceiling's tongue-and-groove planks also deliver a sense of the outdoors, even on wet, gray Pacific Northwest days.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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David Papazian Photography

Portland photographer David Papazian, who grew up in a Redwood City midcentury modern with an exposed beam ceiling and extended roof, says Rummer's layouts allow his camera to capture top to bottom -- "the ceilings are dramatic," he says -- and one room leading to another provides depth.

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Christopher Barnes/Windermere Realty Trust

Janet Habegger bought her 1968 Rummer in the Garden Home neighborhood 18 years ago. She had grown up nearby and remembers her dad complaining that the "mass produced," concrete slab homes would bring down the value of the neighborhood and his custom-built two story along Fanno Creek.

[The 1968 Rummer house on a 7,405-square-foot lot at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. in the Garden Home neighborhood is for sale at $719,000.]

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Christopher Barnes/Windermere Realty Trust

Habegger and her husband, Hank, want to downsize and have put their three-bedroom house on the market at $719,000. That's higher than the value of her childhood home.

Last year, Bob Rummer drove down her street, stopped in front of her home at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. and announced to her husband, "I built this home." Rummer then added, "my wife doesn't want me to, but I'm still looking at lots."

[The 1968 Rummer house on a 7,405-square-foot lot at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. in the Garden Home neighborhood is for sale at $719,000.]

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Christopher Barnes/Windermere Realty Trust

Habegger's home is in the Bohmann Park tract, which Rummer developed on a former hazelnut farm. For four blocks, it's all Rummers, the largest accumulation anywhere. Sixty two of them, according to

. Each has unifying features and each has been altered by its owners' idea of good taste.

Habegger says her home "is like art. Some people truly appreciate it."

[The 1968 Rummer house on a 7,405-square-foot lot at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. in the Garden Home neighborhood is for sale at $719,000.]

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Janet Eastman | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Detractors are especially critical of midcentury modern's energy inefficiency. Homeowners add insulation and mini-split heat pump system to bolster the original radiant heat in the concrete floors. Flat roofs, which are detested by pragmatists, need to be reworked to ward off sunlight and rain. Two-by-four construction can feel drafty. Another big complaint: If you don't take care of a home that relies on clean, minimal lines to look good, it looks bad.

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Val C. Ballestrem, education manager of the Architectural Heritage Center in Portland, says Rummers are representative of the era in which they were built, "but with Rummers we're talking about something that is far more high-style than an average 1960s house."

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Ballestrem adds that the concentration of Rummer houses in areas like Bohmann Park or Oak Hills "leaves us with a unique architectural legacy."

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

In 2013, Beaverton's

, which includes a mix of 1960s ranch, split-level and Rummer homes, earned a spot on the

National Register of Historic Places

, the first midcentury modern historic neighborhood in Oregon.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Kids who grew up in a Rummer home often return to start a new generation, says Darla Castagno, a long-time Oak Hills homeowner who was instrumental in creating the historic district.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Rummers were advertised as adaptable dwellings and they have held up to the claim.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Christopher Barnes/Windermere Realty Trust

Habegger's real estate agent, Christopher Barnes of Windermere Realty Trust, says they're an easy home to remodel without having to jeopardize the midcentury lines.

[The 1968 Rummer house on a 7,405-square-foot lot at 7290 S.W. 84th Ave. in the Garden Home neighborhood is for sale at $719,000.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

Bob Rummer doesn't mind that people have tweaked his work. At a talk in 2009, he commented that he likes how "the kids" have fixed them up and that people have installed retractable atrium ceilings.

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Many of his homes are 1,850 square feet or a little larger, and each was carefully located, typically on a quarter-acre lot to maximize indoor-outdoor living. Rummer was willing to rotate rooms to capture a better view.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Unlike most houses, Rummer living rooms are radically oriented toward the backyard and the front has no porch to step up to or a picture window offering a hint of what's inside.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Windermere Realty Trust

Yet, the interiors of Rummer houses are so transparent that owners joke they can't tell if the dog is inside or out. Barnes of Windermere Realty Trust says, "No matter where you were in the house, you could always see outside."

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Randy Hopp of Hopp Insurance Agency and his family have known the Rummers for 60 years. Randy's dad, Ray, bought Bob Rummer's insurance company in Newberg.

[1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

"Bob was always a family man and I think that contributed to some of his ideas in the Rummer homes," says Randy Hopp. "Bob loved to develop and create designs that were family friendly and logical. He was and still is for that matter committed to Rummer homes. The thought of building again keeps him going. After this many decades, Rummer homes are still iconic and the man behind them is still around."

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

The dramatically different dwellings represented an optimistic time, when suburbs were spreading, technology and engineering jobs were growing, and patio parties reigned on weekends.

[A 1969 Robert Rummer-built house in Beaverton.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

"That Rummer homes are so popular today is a reflection of the timelessness and livability of the design, and their accessibility to the middle class," says Peggy Moretti, executive director of Restore Oregon.

"Bob embodied the enthusiasm and entrepreneurial spirit of that period," she adds, "and still does."

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Boone Brothers Media/Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

Coming Saturday: Robert Rummer homes for sale like this one at 1961 Park Forest Ave. in Lake Oswego, which is listed at $699,900 by Marisa Swenson of Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty.

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Tyler Stone

[This Rummer home is in the Bohmann Park / Vista Brook neighborhood of Portland.]

--Janet Eastman | 503-294-4072

|

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Stephanie Yao Long | The Oregonian/OregonLive

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Restore Oregon/Jack Bookwalter

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Portland Modern Home Tour

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Restore Oregon

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Restore Oregon

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Portland Modern Home Tour

[Restore Oregon's 2016 Rummer tour included this Rummer in the Oak Hills neighborhood of Washington County.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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Modern Homes Portland-Living Room Realty

[The owners of a 1964 Robert Rummer home on Southwest 105th Ave. in Beaverton, which sold for $564,900 in April 2018, received an offer after 11 days on the market.]

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