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Politics & Power Quote by Russell Lynes

"The bungalow had more to do with how Americans live today than any other building that has gone remotely by the name of architecture in our history"

About this Quote

A backhanded compliment is doing the heavy lifting here: Lynes crowns the bungalow as America’s most consequential building type, then quietly disqualifies much of the nation’s “architecture” from the category of relevance. The line is barbed because it pits lived reality against professional prestige. If the bungalow “had more to do” with American life, that means the buildings critics canonize - beaux-arts monuments, civic temples, stylistic showpieces - function more as cultural theater than as the stages where daily life actually happens.

The intent is corrective and faintly prosecutorial. Lynes is pointing to a democratic, mass-produced form that shaped behavior: smaller households, privatized domesticity, a new relationship to the street, the fantasy of autonomy on a modest plot of land. The bungalow didn’t just house Americans; it trained them in a particular idea of comfort and citizenship, where “home” becomes the primary site of identity and aspiration.

Subtext: modern American taste is less authored than acquired. The bungalow’s spread through pattern books, catalogs, and developer grids makes it the architectural equivalent of a hit song - widely copied, instantly legible, and dismissed by gatekeepers precisely because it’s popular. Lynes, writing as a critic in a century of suburban expansion and middle-class consolidation, is also diagnosing the profession’s blind spot: architecture that wins awards may lose the plot, while the most culturally powerful building is the one people actually choose, afford, and remake over time.

Quote Details

TopicLife
Source
Verified source: The Domesticated Americans (Russell Lynes, 1963)
Text match: 99.63%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
the bungalow had more to do with how sub-urban Americans live today than any other building that has gone even remotely by the name of architecture in our history. (Exact page not verified from a digitized primary copy; likely in the bungalow discussion section). The strongest primary-source evidence located points to Russell Lynes's 1963 book The Domesticated Americans. A contemporary 1963 review in Architectural Forum quotes the line and attributes it directly to Lynes while discussing that book, indicating the wording there was 'sub-urban Americans' and 'gone even remotely' rather than the modern circulation form 'Americans' and 'gone remotely.' Additional contemporaneous notices confirm The Domesticated Americans was published in 1963 by Harper & Row. I did not locate an earlier speech, article, or interview by Lynes containing this line, so this book is the earliest verifiable source found in this search. However, because I could not inspect a full digitized first-edition page image from the book itself, the page number remains unconfirmed.
Other candidates (1)
the Ultimate Book of Quotations (Joseph Demakis, 2012) compilation97.4%
... The bungalow had more to do with how Americans live today than any other building that has gone remotely by the n...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Lynes, Russell. (2026, March 6). The bungalow had more to do with how Americans live today than any other building that has gone remotely by the name of architecture in our history. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-bungalow-had-more-to-do-with-how-americans-165778/

Chicago Style
Lynes, Russell. "The bungalow had more to do with how Americans live today than any other building that has gone remotely by the name of architecture in our history." FixQuotes. March 6, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-bungalow-had-more-to-do-with-how-americans-165778/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The bungalow had more to do with how Americans live today than any other building that has gone remotely by the name of architecture in our history." FixQuotes, 6 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-bungalow-had-more-to-do-with-how-americans-165778/. Accessed 21 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

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Russell Lynes (December 2, 1910 - September 14, 1991) was a Critic from USA.

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