If you used to consider vintage ramblers architectural eyesores but now appreciate them, Michelle Gringeri-Brown probably deserves some of the credit.
Rambler-bashing was the norm when she and her husband, Jim Brown, launched Atomic Ranch magazine (www.atomic-ranch.com) in 2004. At that time, ranch-style houses were dismissed as the ugly ducklings of design, the home of last resort for first-time buyers.
The magazine quickly became a cheerleader for simple postwar homes, advocating for their preservation and helping owners find home-improvement resources.
Now ranch-style homes are finding new fans who appreciate their clean lines and open floor plans. And the Browns have published their second coffeetable book, "Atomic Ranch: Midcentury Interiors" (Gibbs Smith, $40), a detailed look at eight drool-worthy homes and how their owners have reinvented them for 21st-century living. We caught up with writer/editor Gringeri-Brown at home in Portland, Ore., to seek her dos and don'ts for remodeling and decorating "the regular old ranch house."
Q What's making ranch houses retro cool?
A It remains generational. People who are attracted to a more retro house, with its original elements, tend to be in their late 20s and early 30s, and it can indicate a whole lifestyle -- going to scooter rallies, bowling, "Mad Men" parties. With TV promoting it as cool, it's not just your Aunt Edna's crummy rambler. And by and large, they're still more affordable than bungalows.
Q A few years ago, you were concerned about ranches being torn down to make way for McMansions. Has the real estate meltdown had a silver lining for ranch-house preservation?
A With the economy tanking, and flippers having to take a step back, fewer ranch homes are getting the Home Depot treatment, when everything becomes vanilla. There's more appreciation of what they can be, less disregard and thinking this is a housing stock that should be cleaned out and Dwell-ified.