Chicago architect George Fred Keck (1895-1980) unlike many of his Modernist contemporaries, was a technocrat and tinkerer first and foremost. Long before the advent of solar panels, his solar homes ...
Houses of Tomorrow follows the evolution of Chicago architecture firm Keck & Keck – created by brothers George Fred Keck and William Keck – who designed modern, award-winning, affordable homes ...
The Elmhurst Art Museum’s newest exhibit, Houses of Tomorrow: Solar Homes from Keck to Today, has opened with exhibits centered around the landmark George Fred Keck-designed passive solar home which ...
A house in northwest Indiana, one of the last homes designed by the influential 20th-century Chicago architects Keck & Keck, was sold by its original owner in two days. The five-bedroom, ...
A midcentury house in Olympia Fields designed by passive-solar pioneers Keck & Keck in 1954 is coming on the market for the first time in nearly three decades. Terry Debruin is asking $399,000 for the ...
One can marvel at the House of Tomorrow from the 1933 Chicago World's Fair on a cliff in Beverly Shores overlooking Lake Michigan. Designed by architect George Fred Keck, the experimental three-story ...
A three-bedroom, one-story midcentury modern-style house in Glencoe that was designed by the firm Keck & Keck was listed on Wednesday for $750,000. Located in Glencoe’s Forest Crest subdivision, which ...
Houses of Tomorrow follows the evolution of Chicago architecture firm Keck & Keck – created by brothers George Fred Keck and William Keck – who designed modern, award-winning, affordable homes ...
"House of Tomorrow" was an exhibition house built at the Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago, 1933; it was later moved to Beverly Shores, Indiana and became known as the Miller House. See ...