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Published in The Seattle Times online on March 21, 2024
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on March 24, 2024
Climate of today sinks Puyallup’s 1941 ‘House of Tomorrow’
By Clay Eals
The setting was — and remains — idyllic.
It’s just a stone’s throw (or two) from busy Highway 167 and the green-tinted George Milroy truss bridge that crosses the robust Puyallup River at 66th Avenue East. But this quiet spot in rural Pierce County also is hidden by woods and tucks itself along meandering Clarks Creek.
Facing the babbling stream and hearing little but the chirps of birds, you might never guess that behind you, for 83 years, has stood a unique multi-floor residence that its designer and builder dubbed the House of Tomorrow.
If you’re familiar with hucksterish home shows, such a label sounds like so much real-estate hype. But it’s an identifier as singular and audacious as its originator, Bert Allen Smyser (1893-1987).
The brash entrepreneur assembled a career of not always highly heralded feats and schemes. His 1930 coffee-pot shaped Tacoma roadhouse survives today as Bob’s Java Jive. Rejected, however, was Smyser’s late-1950s brainstorm to host what became the Seattle World’s Fair, complete with a “sky-high” restaurant and a swirling, suspended transit system, in Auburn.
Smyser — whose nickname was “Bullnose” because he preferred rounded to square corners — lived with his wife for decades in his Clarks Creek creation, a symphony of curves in the established international Art Deco style known as Streamline Moderne. Equally notable was Smyser’s pioneering use of plywood as a primary building material. Upon the home’s construction, the Tacoma News Tribune declared it “as modern as milady’s next fall chapeau.”
Over time, however, the elements took a soggy toll. Repeatedly and increasingly frequently, Clarks Creek flooded the building — four times between 1941 and 1978, and in at least seven instances since 2008, when its latest private owner purchased it. The twin culprits, says Randy Brake, Pierce County project manager, were nearby development and climate change.
In 2016, the county sought mitigation funds from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. In 2022, FEMA granted $600,000 to help the county buy the property and raze its signature home, determining that it was neither cost-effective nor practical to relocate it. The county aims to return the site to wetland in perpetuity.
At only 1,012 square feet, the House of Tomorrow is hardly a mansion. But Smyser’s creation and the experimenter himself present a complex, fascinating tale, authenticated by historically meticulous and richly illustrated research documents totaling 272 pages. At last-peek open houses Jan. 17 and Feb. 3, streams of visitors verified its appeal.
But demolition is nigh. The bulldozer is due to arrive in April.
Alas, once again tomorrow cannot keep pace with today.
WEB EXTRAS
Thanks to Adam Alsobrook and Randy Brake for their invaluable help with this installment!
No 360 video or additional newspaper clips this week, but you will find covers of two research documents totaling 272 pages on the House of Tomorrow.