I've always seen the pictures and advertisments of the Levitt homes built during the early 50's. They included a host of appliances pre-installed in the new homes, including a Bendix Front-loading washer. With all the homes that he built in the northeast, I imagine there's at least a few of the Levitt-spec washers still agitating around out there somewhere! I am suprised, with a massive contract like this, that Bendix's washer business didn't survive. I guess part of it has to do with the change in contract to General Electric that occured when Levitt started building in Pennsylvania and other smaller neighborhoods south. Do any of you all have any of these old Levitt-spec Bendix machines?
Unfortunatley, William Levitt didn't build too many of his neat little homes this far south. I'd love to own one of these neat little mid-century homes, and restore it back to it's original as-built condition with taylor-made kitchen cabinets, and radiant floor heating. We do have one neighborhood of Levitt Jubilees around here built around 1958, with a 500 or so home in it...now quite the 25,000 homes the New York and Pennsylvania neighborhoods had! The problem is that the neighborhood is now a particurlarly nice place to live due to it's clientele. Maybe I'll get lucky and the neighborhood will turn around
I came across this link while looking to bring the kitchen of my more traditionally constructed postwar home back to it's origional appearance:
Unfortunatley, William Levitt didn't build too many of his neat little homes this far south. I'd love to own one of these neat little mid-century homes, and restore it back to it's original as-built condition with taylor-made kitchen cabinets, and radiant floor heating. We do have one neighborhood of Levitt Jubilees around here built around 1958, with a 500 or so home in it...now quite the 25,000 homes the New York and Pennsylvania neighborhoods had! The problem is that the neighborhood is now a particurlarly nice place to live due to it's clientele. Maybe I'll get lucky and the neighborhood will turn around
I came across this link while looking to bring the kitchen of my more traditionally constructed postwar home back to it's origional appearance: