Walter Stockmayer was an internationally known chemist who contributed to classified research during World War II. After the war he taught at MIT and then transferred to Dartmouth in 1961. Stockmayer was drawn to the area because of the college’s proximity to the White Mountains. He was a passionate hiker and lover of the outdoors. Sylvia Stockmayer was an avid gardener.
The Stockmayer’s had strong opinions about the design of their Norwich house, wishing to have a home as a “work of art in harmony with the magnificence of their surroundings.” Their friend Lucille Zimmerman, who lived in the first New England Usonian home to be designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in Manchester, NH, recommended Wright’s apprentice, Allan Gelbin.
The house was set into the carved-out hillside on the north, providing protection from the elements. It rests on a concrete slab, “integrally colored terracotta red”; it is heated from warmed copper coils below the slab. Brick was combined with cypress wood within and without. Gelbin was proud of the passive solar strategy integrated into the design.
Allan Gelbin wrote in his memoir, Magic, “I had to figure out what would fulfill their invisible inner wishes as they related to their surroundings both inside and outside. Answers were found by way of the liberation of the space within—the greatest lessons learned from Mr. Wright…and the simplicity of genuine, basic, time-tested materials uncovered by paint or one material falsely imitating another. That liberation came by way of a roof that echoed the slope of the surrounding hills running in counterpoint to the great sheltering flat room. Music at work in structure!”
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