In a 1998
Los Angeles Times editorial about the area's evolving standards for development, the birth of the dingbat is retold (as a
cautionary tale): "By mid-century, a development-driven southern California was in full stride, paving its bean fields, leveling mountaintops, draining waterways and filling in wetlands...In our rush to build we tolerated monumentally careless and unattractive urban design...Some of it [was] awful—start with the 'dingbat' apartment house, a boxy two-story walk-up with sheltered parking at street level and not one inch of outdoor space."
Geographer Barbara Rubin writes that since the existing housing stock of
California bungalows, Mediterranean-style small houses,
Spanish Colonial Revival duplexes and aging
Victorians was insufficient, "a compromise capable of accommodating a marked increase in density, yet human in scale, and economical to construct, evolved by the early 1950s." This was the dingbat. Dingbats are generally designed to be built on a single, standard residential lot, and use the same types of materials and construction techniques as single-family house construction. Because of this a dingbat is generally comparable in construction cost to a large 2-story house, with none of the expensive features required in larger apartment buildings such as elevators, fire suppression systems, and multistory parking garages. Dingbats were appealing to the three important factors of the
real estate business - builders, landlords and renters: • Developers used the
cookie-cutter, straight-line approach to building because simplicity and repetition held down costs, allowed
economies of scale and required much less
skilled labor than would curvier or more creative buildings. The modest scale of the individual buildings reduced the need for costly, specialized building techniques required in taller structures. This allowed them to be constructed of wood by contractors and laborers who were accustomed to building large suburban houses. •
Land owners profited if they invested in the new apartment style and replaced one or two streams of rental income with triple or quadruple the number of units. • Since each unit typically had a private entrance, stucco boxes offered an affordable version of the
American Dream to city dwellers who aspired to owning a detached, single-family home, and with on-site parking, dingbats participated in the
car culture of postwar American life. Rubin continues, "Inserted into empty lots or replacing the [existing] residential stock, the dingbat [was] a remarkably successfully transitional solution, the fulminations of architectural critics notwithstanding." As housing costs have risen in subsequent decades, many of the buildings have been renovated and now command high rents. The production of dingbats essentially ceased by the mid-1970s because they were "zoned out of existence when their signature back-out parking was banned by city ordinance". An unusual nonresidential use of the dingbat style can be seen in the
Lackawanna, New York, City Hall. ==Architecture, construction and styling==