Midwest Home celebrates a publishing milestone with this issue: 25 years featuring the finest in local homes, design, and architecture. To kick off our 25th year, we chose 25 Twin Cities residences significant for their landmark designs and enduring vitality.
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1. David Salmela of Salmela Architect in Duluth, one of Minnesota’s leading architects, designed this Deephaven home for builder Kevin Streeter. Stark yet ethereal, the design embodies Salmela’s modern Scandinavian minimalism.
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2. Architect Charles Stinson designed this composition of horizontal boxes on a site near Lake Harriet in 2003. Currently on the market, the home’s high ceilings, walls of glass, and expanses of wood create warm, light-filled spaces.
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3. Frank Lloyd Wright designed this site-hugging, 1951 home near Cedar Lake in Minneapolis with slanting walls of culled marble.
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4. Julie Snow of Snow Kreilich Architects designed this boxy house for an urban corner lot in Minneapolis. Built of concrete, wood, and glass, it’s both airy and distinctive.
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5. This International Style house, designed by James Brunet in 1936, has been designated a landmark by the Minneapolis Heritage Preservation Commission. A third floor added in a recent remodel by Peterssen/Keller Architecture maintained the design’s original expression.
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6. This Kenwood Victorian, currently on the market, may look familiar. Its fame from the opening credits of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” endures, though the TV series ended in 1977.
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7. The 1884 Driscoll-Weyerhaeuser house is one of the surviving grand old dames of Summit Avenue. Emmanuel Masqueray remodeled the Queen Anne in 1915.
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8. Summit Avenue’s Louis W. Hill house, a 1903 design by Clarence Johnston, wrapped a Georgian Revival envelop around English Renaissance interiors. Twin staircases in the high-ceilinged foyer frame a reception room that overlooks the river valley.
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9. The Pillsbury/Jundt house, the historic Wayzata manor on Bracketts Point, holds a commanding view of Lake Minnetonka. The estate, known as Southways, has been on and off the market since 2007; its future is uncertain.
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10. Designed by architect Frederick Soper in 1911, this Spanish Revival home with its gracious terraces is a landmark along Lake of the Isles.
25 Iconic Homes Digital Extras
Iconic Homes 11-25
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Photos by
1. Peter Bastianelli-Kerze
2 & 6. Landmark Photography, Listing Agent for home 6: Berg Larsen Group with Coldwell Banker Burnet
3 Bobak Ha’Eri
4 Dean Kaufman
5 & 7–10 Karen Melvin Photograhy

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