Executive summary by
darmansjah
PALM SPRINGS
BEST for ARCHITECTURE
Miles into your trip :
1,308 From Vegas, take 4½-hour drive on the I-15 into
the desert
When Elvis needed to leave the
Vegas madness behind for a while, it was to Palm Springs that he
escaped. Just across the California border, Palm Springs is another desert city, baking in the small flatland
between four mountains ranges. Compared with the showmanship of Vegas, Palm Springs is more private. Rows of
walled-off houses and small hotel complexes, most with a deliciously inviting
pool just visible through a gate, testify to a place that takes its undisturbed
leisure very seriously.
Hidden high in the hills, Albert
Frey's Russell House is a modernist great, highlighted in Robert Imber's
architecture tours-as is the Kaufmann House
This penchant for privacy
started in the 1950s, when scores of Hollywood stars and singers turned the
place into a sort of Tinsel town-on-tour. Many were on studio contracts that
forbade them from being further than a day’s drive from LA in case they were
needed for shooting; Palm Springs
was just far enough should a director call. Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, and Frank
Sinarta made this their home at different points in their lives.
There remains a faded but
tangible sense of mid-century glamour. Palm
Springs’ desert location was a blank canvas for architects after WWII. It
was fashionable for those moving to the city to commission boundary-smashing
modernist houses with long, straight lines, jutting overhangs and sleek
walkways – true machines for living. Most still look as futuristic as they must
have in the 1950s, and after seeing a few blocks, it’s hard not to feel like a
character in a David Hockney painting. Richard Neutra’s Kaufmann House gests
the most plaudits, but the A-framed abode where Elvis and Priscilla spent their
honeymoon is just as impressive – like a rocket about to take off.
Unlike the architecture, many
characters from Palm Springs’ prime have drunk their last martini. But at
Johnny Costa’s Ristorante, there’s still a link to the Rat Pack era. Johny’s a
grizzled 80-year-old-italian-American who, since 1977, has provided Palm
Springs with what must be the finest foccacia anywhere outside of the Old
Country; int the 1980s, Sinatra used to come to the restaurant where Johny
worked.
‘He was a bit of a big shot,’
says Johnny in his thick, Italy-via-New Jersey drawl. ‘Normally, I cooked for
him, but one time, when I wasn’t working, he ordered his usual linguine and
clams, took one bite and then threw the plate at the wall. From then on, I had
to be there every time he came in.’ frank like Johnny’s cooking so much he
employed him as his personal chef at home for two years. His speciality was
what is known as Steak Sinatra on today’s menu – steak with onions and peppers.
Johnny remembers when Palm Springs still had sand on the
roads, the desert encroaching much more than it does today. ‘But then Sinatra
died; the old mafia guys who came in, the Rat pack – all dead. But you just
have to meet new people, make a new family.’ Things move on, even in a place as
suspended in time as this.
If Robert Imber’s tours don’t inspire a love for modernist
architecture, nothing will (from US$73; psmoderntours@aol.com).
See why Sinarta loved Johnny’s cooking by ordering Steak
Sinarta at his restaurant (from US$15; johnnycostaspalmsprings.com).
The Orbit In, together with its sister motel The Hideaway, is a slice
of classic Palm Springs glamour.
Ther rooms, which surround a pool, are kitted out with genuine 1950s equipment
and the complimentary Orbitini Cocktails, served a sundown, will have you
thinking you’re Clark Gable (from US$125; orbitin.com).
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