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Quirky, iconic Lieb House to set sail

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  • Quirky, iconic Lieb House to set sail

    Posted on Tue, Mar. 10, 2009

    Quirky, iconic Lieb House to set sail

    The '60s beach shack that narrowly escaped demolition will go by barge
    to its new home.

    By Inga Saffron
    Inquirer Architecture Critic


    After being stuck in limbo on a Barnegat Light, N.J., pier for nearly
    six weeks, the iconic 1960s beach shack designed by Robert Venturi and
    Denise Scott Brown is clear to set sail at high tide Thursday morning
    for a new home on the exclusive north shore of Long Island.
    The building, which is known as the Lieb House and is considered to be
    among the Philadelphia architects' most significant early works,
    narrowly escaped demolition by a developer in January when Barnegat
    Light officials agreed to let its adoptive owners store it in a
    harbor-side parking lot. That reprieve gave them time to secure
    permission to float the quirky house to their property in Glen Cove,
    overlooking the Manhattan skyline.

    The new owners, Deborah S. Sarnoff and Robert Gotkin, finally obtained
    a crucial authorization last week from New York's Department of
    Environmental Conservation, clearing the way for the 95-mile ocean
    journey from Long Beach Island to Long Island, said Jim Venturi, the
    architects' son, who is organizing the move on their behalf.

    The state agency had sought assurances that the couple's retaining
    wall on Long Island Sound would not be damaged when the house was
    transferred from barge to land. Once the agency gave its consent, the
    town of Glen Cove quickly issued a building permit, the last of the
    necessary approvals, said Gotkin, a plastic surgeon.

    "All we need now is calm winds and calm waters," Gotkin added.

    Jim Venturi said a moving team from Wolfe House & Building Co. planned
    to launch the Lieb House on an ocean-class barge from the Barnegat
    Light pier at precisely 9 a.m. Thursday to take advantage of high
    tide.

    Two tugboats will ease the 1,835-square-foot structure through the
    Barnegat inlet, then head north along the New Jersey coast. After
    spending the night docked in Staten Island, the shore house will get
    its first glimpse of the Manhattan skyline just after dawn Friday.

    Venturi has arranged an early-morning party at Manhattan's South
    Street Seaport so his parents and interested architecture buffs can
    wave at the little house as it makes its way under the Brooklyn
    Bridge, sometime between 7 and 9 a.m.

    Most likely, the crowd will be able to see two of the house's most
    distinctive features: an immense black number 9 next to the front door
    and a sailboat-shaped side window. Despite its architectural pedigree,
    the house is famous for distilling the essence of a Jersey Shore house
    into its boxy form. It is a curriculum standard in many architecture
    schools.

    Robert Venturi, who delighted in vernacular architecture, originally
    described it as a "bold little ugly banal box." It took a while,
    however, for Barnegat residents to take a liking to the plain design
    and oversize graphic. Its original owners, Judith and Nathaniel Lieb,
    sold it not long after it was finished in 1969, supposedly because of
    disputes with their neighbors.

    By the time developer Michael Ziman purchased the property as a
    tear-down, the Lieb House was an antique by Long Beach Island
    standards. Although it has four bedrooms, it is a fraction of the size
    of the current crop of Shore mansions.

    Ziman told Jim Venturi he could have the house for free if he arranged
    to move it off the site by the Feb. 2 closing date. Venturi initially
    despaired of finding someone to foot the moving bill, but at the last
    moment, he found a near-perfect match in Gotkin and Sarnoff.

    The couple, who run a Park Avenue dermatology and cosmetic-surgery
    practice, not only live in a house designed by the elder Venturi and
    Scott Brown - the Kalpakjian House - but they also own enough land to
    accommodate a second structure. They intend to use the Barnegat beach
    shack as a guest house.

    "It's getting a sibling," said Jim Venturi.

    "When Jimmy called, I really thought it was a joke," recalled
    Sarnoff. She readily agreed to help preserve the house, even though
    she had no idea of the complications ahead. "I thought we'd split it
    in half and move it by truck," she said.

    The couple soon learned that the house was too tall to fit under the
    overhead telephone cables. But they persevered, even as the costs and
    complexity mounted.

    Sarnoff said she had learned to love the work of Venturi and Scott
    Brown. About 10 years ago, she stumbled upon the Kalpakjian house and
    fell in love with it, even though she knew nothing then about the
    architects. She was devastated when she lost a bidding war for the
    property, which was completed in 1986. She bid at two more sales
    before she succeeded in buying the house, which sits on a 2.5-acre
    promontory with spectacular views of Manhattan and the Long Island
    Sound.

    Now, she and Gotkin will own two houses by the Philadelphia
    architects, representing two distinct periods in their career. While
    the Lieb House still shows the modernist influence of Le Corbusier,
    the Kalpakjian House takes its cues from America's shingle-style,
    ocean-front villas.

    Both structures clearly have salt in their bones. Because they were
    designed to take advantage of water views, their living rooms are on
    the second floors. So even though the Lieb House will lose its iconic
    address of 9 E. 30th St., it will continue to exist in a seaside
    environment.

    "It's not the same context," acknowledged Denise Scott Brown. "But
    it's a wonderful context."


    Contact architecture critic Inga Saffron at 215-854-2213 or
    [email protected].
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