Welcome! This is a place for homeowners and mid-century enthusiasts dedicated to the Fullerton Groves Forever Houses.
Whether you're exploring your home's history, looking for restoration guidance, or connecting with neighbors, this resource celebrates and supports the neighborhood’s mid-century legacy.
If you'd like to have your curb painted by the excellent team at Arenas Curb Appeal, we've arranged for them to be in the neighborhood on May 21st.
Text: (714) 760-3224
Tell them you're in the Fullerton Groves Forever House neighborhood and your address, and that you'd like to have your curb done on the 21st May.
For the Forever House design
There's a lot of variations out there!
So we thought it would be best to use the original and correct name, and that way going forward we have an identity that is seperate from all the other Forever House neighborhoods in California and the US. We used elements from the logo on the service manual, combined with the original Fullerton Groves marketing to create our unique look.
Archibald Quincy Jones (pictured left) was a Los Angeles–based architect and educator known for innovative buildings in the modernist style and for urban planning that pioneered the use of greenbelts and green design.
More on Wikipedia ↗Frederick Earl Emmons (pictured right) was an American architect. With A. Quincy Jones, he designed many residential properties, including tract houses and commercial buildings in Los Angeles, Palm Springs, Pomona and more.
More on Wikipedia ↗Pardee-Phillips was an award-winning builder in Southern California, that built mid-century modern subdivisions in the Pacific Palisades, Los Angeles, Orange County and even Las Vegas.
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