William Trout, Architect

1978 CLEVELAND ARTS PRIZE FOR ARCHITECTURE

William Trout had a cause: the smaller home. Though he designed a 37,000-square-foot “winter bungalow” in Vail, Colorado, for the Shah of Iran’s finance director, he preferred the more modest assignment: Something like half the homes for which Trout created the original design and blueprints contained no more than 1,600 square feet of floor space. In fact, he saw this work as his personal mission.

It was his belief that what drove many people to commission a large home was the desire to live in something “architecturally exciting.” Trout set out to prove that you could have “innovative architecture in a tighter package.” Indeed, he told the Plain Dealer Sunday Magazine in 1976, by designing architecturally satisfying homes that occupied less land—not to mention ate up people’s time and pocketbooks with the cost of building, cooling, heating, furnishing, decorating and making monthly mortgage payments on all that unused space—he was helping people “get control of their lives.” It’s as though the house “exists,” he told writer Caren Goldman, “for us to maintain it.”

The “ticky-tacky little boxes” that lined the streets of subdivisions were every bit as unacceptable as dull public buildings.  A bland-looking structure may take only a few weeks or months to design and erect, Trout argued, but it “takes society years and years to get rid of that thing.” He felt even worse for the families that settled for such an abode when they could have had something so much more, well, nourishing.

Born in Cleveland in 1935, Trout was pursuing studies in sculpture at the Cleveland Institute of Art when he wandered one day into an architectural exhibit at nearby Kent State University. The scale of the work thrilled him, as did the idea that people would be living in it. He knocked on an office door and asked, “How do I get into this place?” It was his skill as a diver that would pay Will Trout’s way through KSU; but by graduation in 1961, his impressive designing had earned him the opportunity to polish his craft at the elbow of such eminent local architects as John Terence Kelly and William B. Morris. In 1966 Trout opened his own firm based in the western suburb of Rocky River.

Among the early commissions that were to make his name were the William G. Moore home (Moreland Hills), Joseph Heinen home (Chagrin Falls) and Richard Schubert home (Bay Village). Later clients would include then Lieutenant Governor Richard Celeste and Cleveland Indians pitcher Gaylord Perry—but also (Trout proudly noted) a policeman, a widow and a telephone repairman. National recognition of the Landings condominiums he designed for Avon Lake led to important out-of-town commissions and the opening of branch offices in Vail Colorado, where the family moved into a log cabin built in 1869, and Seattle.

Trout resonated with the aesthetic and feel of the mountain lodge, instinctively shunning such then popular building materials as rubberized vinyl brick and wood grain Formica in favor of natural materials. The home he designed for himself and his family featured exposed walls of sealed smooth-sawn cedar with factory-applied stain and preservative, white pine floors with a polyurethane finish, support posts of 12” x 12” mine shaft timbers, ceilings of Alaskan white pine, beams of rough-hewn cedar and a roof of hand-split cedar shake. Trout juxtaposed wood horizontally, vertically and diagonally to create visual excitement, hung bright fabrics against natural wood, and gave his designs evocative names like Rainflower, Songbird, Wildflute.

Signature elements included Plexiglas bubble-windows or skylights in the exterior walls or ceilings to bring in natural light and inspiring views. (Early on, other typical features often included supergraphics on the garage doors and—the influence of Pacific Northwest Native American culture—a totem pole built from scrap wood found on the site.) A fireplace, dominating the central area where the family gathered to talk, play and eat, was a feature deliberately “reminiscent,” Caren Goldman notes, “of pioneers starting a fire in a log cabin to start the day.” (Three decades before Global Warming became a household word, Trout incorporated into the design of his own house such energy-saving innovations as a Heatilator fireplace, solar roof panels and wind impellers, recycling heated air to the windward side of the house through the core of double walls.)

A home, Trout believed, should bring people together, not isolate them from one another: The kitchen belonged in the heart of the house. “I want [visitors] to immediately understand that this is a very warm and inviting kind of a house—a nice place to just sit and have conversation or a quiet moment,” the architect told Goldman. “How many times have you heard somebody say that the best parties are always in the kitchen?”

”When you look back on it,” Will Trout told Plain Dealer real estate editor Bill Lubinger in 1989, “what did America give to the world?  It gave people the single-family home, and that’s [an] important heritage we need to preserve.”

—Dennis Dooley

 

Cleveland Arts Prize
P.O. Box 21126 • Cleveland, OH 44121 • 440-523-9889 • info@clevelandartsprize.org

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