It is easy to dismiss the 1970s as "the decade that taste forgot". But to do so would be to overlook the decade's contributions in architecture, furniture design and interior decorating. After all, with the Bad and the Ugly there is usually some Good. A more thorough examination of this period is particularly worthwhile today, a time that (like the 1970s) is burdened by recession, corruption, and high unemployment rates; a time of renewed environmentalism and disenchantment with material excess. And like our early 70s counterparts, we too are emerging from a period dominated by sleek, minimalist modernism in interior design.
The 70s was a study in contradiction: austerity and decadence, drab earth tones and campy colors, nature-loving hippiedom and high-tech futurism. In his book 70s House, David Heathcote argues that the decade was a significant “watershed” for interior domestic design, marking the transition from the Modernist 60s to an era in which “style and the individualistic ethos of fashion design became the guiding principles.” According to Lutyens and Hislop in their book 70s Style & Design, the 70s represented a reaction against sleek mid-century modernism in favor of “playful embellishment and radical experimentation with form.”
Self-expression and individuality were hallmarks of the time. Of course, self-expression can manifest itself in some downright hideous ways, whether in the gloomy wood-paneled rec room or the bedroom saturated in REM-defying Kool-Aid colors. Not to mention the macramé tea cozies, the creepy spider plants, the shag toilet seat covers. I could go on. But a lot of what we think of as 70s was actually a hangover from the 60s, say Lutyens and Hislop, “with its enthusiasm for technology and psychedelic excess.” While “people in the mainstream clomped around in platforms and flares, avant-garde subcultures were honing an alternative look…which ultimately evolved into punk.”
So, what are some of the more interesting, even inspiring, features of 1970s design?
Eco-Tripping Back to Nature
70s style was greatly influenced by the back-to-nature movement, which arose from both a hippie rejection of consumerism and materialism and a renewed environmentalism following the 1973 oil crisis, according to Luytens and Hislop. Architect S. Claire Conroy points out that many 70s architects were early adopters of new energy-efficient technologies and designed houses “as organisms that mesh with their surroundings—living, breathing, and changing together.” Big windows and skylights were popular, as were indoor gardens and elevated or stacked stone fireplaces. While high-tech plastics were obviously big in the 70s, so too was teak and pine furniture. When decorators went overboard with the nature motif it was suffocating, however. Earth-toned terracotta tiles, hanging plants, exposed ceiling beams, wicker furniture and harvest-gold appliances may have some aesthetic appeal on their own. But when they all come together in a single room, however, it is downright depressing.
Open-Plan Living
While many rooms in the 70s resembled wall-to-wall carpeted, wood-paneled dungeons, residential architecture of the time was actually very innovative when it comes to light and space. In many ways, the 70s introduced the concept of “open plan living”, according to some architectural historians. Heathcote says designers responded to the "altered sociology of the family” with double-height spaces, open planned living and grand entrances. Many homes had massive windows, spiral or “floating” staircases, interior second-floor balconies and vaulted ceilings. Often the living room was spread out over multiple levels, sometimes with a sunken seating area. Think of the Brady Bunch home and you get the picture. You may not like the look but you have to admit it was pretty radical. Homes were also being designed to accommodate and integrate children into every day life (not “out of sight out of mind” a la the Mad Men era). Studies and home offices started being built. Kitchens expanded to accommodate more cabinets and countertop space at a time when Julia Child’s cookbooks were all the rage. Many kitchens had islands or breakfast nooks, bringing the family into a room once reserved solely for women or staff.
Color. And Lot’s of It.
Love it or hate it, the 1970s was a colorful time in interior design. For every drab earth-toned room there was an equally colorful one. Today there is a lot of talk of “pops of color.” In the 70s it was more like “explosions of color”. Says Conroy, “these houses were funky and friendly.” The architects “had exuberant spirits; they reveled in form, function, and funkiness.” The toilet seat covers were brightly colored, as were the toilets themselves. Lamps, bedspreads, walls, and furniture: Nothing was spared the Technicolor rainbow. See images 3, 5 and 14 for some colorful examples of 70s decor!
Reign of the Ranch
From the outside, most 70s homes were pretty uninventive. There were the post-and-beam style homes, A-frames, domes, cubes and A-frames. But according to Lisa's Nostalgia Cafe, the king of the 70s home was the one-story ranch. In 1975, 60% of new single-family homes were one-story. Outside the house, you were likely to encounter a Hibachi grill, blacktop driveway and concrete patio, and a metal swing set. The average American house was much smaller, at 1,700 square feet compared with 2,500 sq. ft. in 2007.
Chair Mania
The Saarinen tulip chairs were popular, as were various Verner Panton chairs. According to Interior Dezine, the 70s was a time of major advances in the design of chairs and modular office furniture. Designers began experimenting with ergonomic designs for the workplace and home office. Italian designers were at the forefront of radical and experimental furniture design, using high tech materials, tubular steel, bright colors, and polyurethane plastics.
A 1970s Checklist
• Crafts revival and hippiedom (macramé. string art, embroidered wall hangings, afghans)
• Victoriana (e.g. Laura Ashley)
• Scandinavian teak and pine
• Sleek plastics and high-tech materials
• Avocado green and harvest gold appliances
• Bold patterns and prints (flocked wallpaper, flower prints)
• Stacked stone fireplace and stone walls
• Timbered ceiling beams
• Exposed brick walls
• Terracotta tiles and hardwood flooring
• Metal (chrome, polished steel)
• Geometric shapes and lines
• Thick and chunky masculine furniture
• Fiber optic lights
• Wood paneling
• Skylights
• Atriums
• Indoor gardens
• Fireplaces with elevated hearths
• Big windows and lots of glass
• Wall-to-wall carpeting
• Sunken living rooms
• Floating staircases
• Wicker furniture
• Shag rugs
• Earth tones: brick, rust, sand, avocado, harvest gold
• Brightly colored furniture
• Orange
Images:
FIRST ROW
• 1 There is a lot to love about these 5 rooms from the 70s. From top left, clockwise. Small Ritual on Flickr.
Thread Bare on Flickr. Small Ritual on Flickr. Thread Bare on Flickr. My Retrospace.
• 2 Top row, left to right: Rodney Kinsman's Omstak stackable chair; Armchair 4794 by Kartell; Europa floor lamp by Verner Panton; Ettore Sottsass Synthesis 45 chair.
Middle row, left to right: Frank Gehry's Easy Edges corrugated fiberboard chair;. Frank Gehry's Easy Edges wiggle stool; Panton's 123 sofa; Ettore Sottsass
mirror. Bottom row, left to right: Ettore Sottsass orange dining chairs; Lucite chairs;
Settee
""The informal lifestyle of the 1970s produced furniture that catered to leisure and entertaining. This settee has a removable cylindrical bolster that can be used independently of the seat and the backrest supports a plastic tray that can support glasses."
• 3 My Retrospace. This green apple room is sparse and whimsical.
• 4 My Retrospace. Typical masculine, earth-toned study.
• 5 House Beautiful. Mark and Duane Hampton moved into this Manhattan apartment in 1971. The look was "hard, chic, and Hicksian, with glossy red walls, black wool tuxedo sofas, maroon curtains trimmed in black, white plastic tables, and a painting they called 'Alligators in the Sludge.'"
SECOND ROW
• 6 My Retrospace. Seriously groovy swing.
• 7 The Insane Domain. How amazing is this sunken living room?
• 8 Lisa's Nostalgia Cafe. This dining set would not look out of place in today's decor mags.
• 9 My Retrospace. A little bit minimalist and a little bit groovy.
• 10 My Retrospace. Now, this is where the earthy colors and woody tones go overboard and feel stale and suffocating.
THIRD ROW
• 11 Life Goes Strong. Yikes.
• 12 Glen H on Flickr. Now those are some colorful toilets.
• 13 O Modern No comment.
• 14 Via Thread Bare on Flickr.
• 15 Via Small Ritual on Flickr. I had to showcase this photo again. I love this room, which contains many of today's more popular design elements (sleek couches, bold modern rug, elegant arced lamp, lovely wood floors).
















Sprout Side Table
Conversation pits were the bomb.
I feel so alone. Am I the only person who really, really loves the 70s and all its bizarre and ridiculous excesses? Especially all the colors and patterns.
Hahaha , rudebega- of course you're NOT alone!!
House Voyer, I was going to say the same thing. Raised carpet platforms and wall-to-wall in the bathroom is right up there with the conversation pit. Besides the carpet mania, the furniture and even some of the interiors remain very current (save maybe the swing bench in the living room) LOL!
Keep these posts coming. Love it.
Rudebega you are SO not alone. I loved the 70s when I was a kid in the 70s and I still love them. Except for the wall to wall carpet in the bathroom...not a fan...my mother still uses this. Basically everything else - YES. Wow, that red and orange wall pattern brings back a lot of memories. I had something similar.
I have to disagree about Image 10 being stale and suffocating though - the plants, those windows! A little color updating...so perfect
Rudebega, dahling, you are definitely not alone!! The other day I bought this groovatational 1970s Italian steamer/stock pot at an antique store, lots of orange, yellow and lime daisies all over it, and plan to use it every day to steam my veggies :) I am in 70's heaven--peace!
Oh, and um, yeah, I drive a '76 Malibu Classic :)
I love 70s interior decor. Most of this comes from watching Annie Hall as a kid and wanting to live in an apartment like Annie's.
Sorry friends but I don't think the 70's were a decade that taste forgot so much as a decade that launched an all-out War on Taste.
I left the country for two years, 71 - 73, and was shocked and saddened, on my return, to be met by a palpable shallowness not only of design but of cultural consciousness. I believe it was socially engineered to steer people away from the profoundly relevant 60's protests against the military-industrial complex.
Sorry...I love the 70's. Especially the colours (save avocado green, of course).
Sorry friends but I don't think the 70's were a decade that taste forgot so much as a decade that launched an all-out War on Taste.
Ha! Yeah, the '70s really haven't dated well. The minimalist stuff is great (although that was really a holdover from the late '60s), but the rest?
Feh.
I grew up in a house, built in '73, with wall to wall carpet - orange and red deep shag, no less - everywhere but the kitchen / dining area and family room. Yes, including the bathrooms. This was in Phoenix though so at least mold was never an issue. Even if you got the carpet wet, it was dry in a couple of hours.
I will say, I think carpet in the bathroom isn't a bad thing for kids or the elderly, at least from a safety standpoint. Virtually eliminates the potential for slips or falls, and cushions you if you do happen to slip or fall.
Can we at least all agree that those bell bottom pants in picture 10 aren't doing that lady any favors?
Oh, god. I've spent not one, but two decades in the seventies. My parent's house (a one-story ranch!) was built in the seventies and they're both not at all interested in interior design, so they haven't really ever updated anything in there... avocado green bathrooms? check. Wall-to-wall carpet, ALSO avocado green? check. All rooms painted either yellow or red? check. Terracotta tile in the hallway and in the kitchen? check. Dark green countertops in the kitchen? check.
I'm hunting for my first own apartment right now, and I suppose it's no surprise that I'm specifically looking for a place with white walls, white or stainless steel appliances in the kitchen, hardwood or laminate floors and A GODDAMN ALL WHITE BATHROOM.
Don't get me wrong, I love color. POPS of color, not explosions.
I can still remember going to my "rich" friend's house in the 70's...they had a sunken living-room pit with long white shag carpet, and one of those hanging wicker chairs. I thought it was SO COOL!!!
Picture 11, the wood-and-white kitchen, is pretty sad looking but I love picture 10! I could be very happy living in this house. To me, the look is very Oregonian. Plywood is practically a native material in the Northwest, and the abundant glass brings in extra light where days are often overcast.
Anybody who loves the 70's want to buy my house? It's a 1978 split level dream. Complete with harvest gold bathroom, sea grass wallpaper, orange-brown tile, concrete slab patio and a den and formal living room separated by a wall. Will throw in the dog for free.
I have no problem with picture 10...it is quite lovely. And very west coast I agree. I love the oranges from the 70's, and the lighting. I LOVE lamps and light fixtures from the 70's. Mostof them are awesome, with the exception of amber glass. Yuck. Loved this post :)
I was a young child during the seventies and remember the aesthetics fondly because Mom knew how to incorporate current trends without going overboard. During the '70s, her interior design was much like her her beloved Yves Saint Laurent. She could mix the peasant textiles without forgoing the crispness needed to give a room structure.
Ten years ago, she let me have her '70s era Tulip table knock-off and a Spanish leather sling chair I loved as a child. From Mom I learned that every decade has its treasures and creating the mix is half the fun.
avocado kitchens!
The 70s was the Decade That Taste Forgot precisely because the decorators of the era showed so little of it in putting together the contemporary fabrics, furniture and wallpaper. They were so enamoured with the possibilities of new technology, new materials and new lifestyles that they abandoned the restraint required to make them work tastefully. And so we saw bright blue shagpile mixed with blood red flocked wallpaper and apple green wicker chairs and canary yellow floral prints... all in the same space. Too many colours and textures clashing with each other.
Now that we can view these things with hindsight, we can give these vivid elements room to breathe. For example, my sister just renovated her horrible 70s kitchen, but once she'd covered up the chunky chocolate feature bricks with plasterboard and ripped out the bright orange formica and replaced it with modern stainless steel, the original orange tiled splashback suddenly looked like a sexy feature rather than a contributor to visual cacophany.
I LOVE THESE. The ninth one and the last one are my favorites. They make me think of Space Food Sticks and Tang.
AT, more stuff about the 70's ...pretty please.
Catrin, this is an awesome, thoughtful post. For the most part 70s style is not my thing, but I had never given it much thought. Super informative and well-written. AND great images!
The kitchen with the hanging plants. If you changed the tile color, I'd be very very happy with that today.
The avocado kitchen, however, gives me bad flashbacks. ;)
The 70s were cool, especially when one thinks about those faux English manors built nowadays, equipped with monstruous (in size and taste) ''Tuscan'' kitchen.
By the way, stainless is the new avocado, just a matter of fashion.
Ha ha, Waterlily - I hope you get your all white bathroom soon. Maybe your parents' house can be featured on Retro Renovation's as a "time-capsule" house.
I love the 70s.
By the way, stainless is the new avocado, just a matter of fashion.
This is so true. In a decade everybody's gonna regret this stainless steel "morgue chic" look. I've already been completely over it for about 5 years.
"Morgue chic"--love that!
I grew up in the 70s, and oh Wow, 3, 6, 7 and 14 love it. I've been trying to make over my 1975 brick ranch into a 1957 mid-century modern home, and it just won't work. It's time for me to embrace my 70s "pad" and finally enjoy the "grooviness" of where I live. Harvest gold shag carpet..check. Raised hearth brick fireplace...check. Paneled walls...check. Harvest gold bathroom..double check. So I'm gonna paint the walls, install some wood flooring, and I'm done.
Awesome post! I've always been a huge fan of 70s decor...very groovy!
I can't wait to see the 80's...it's coming right? Pleeaassee!!
re: stainless, everyone rags on it, but aren't most professional kitchens (restaurants) stainless, or at least thought to be? I think if that association is true, then stainless will endure for longer than its detractors might hope.
This stuff is so bad it's good.
"Marcia, Marcia, Marcia!" (and Jan, and Cindy)
Love it! Our house was built in the 70's and we have a lot of the requisite 70's decor - sunken living room, floating staircase, timbered beams, stacked stone fireplace, and even a sunken shower!
http://www.bradybunchremodel.com