When you hear the name Paul Rudolph, you most likely think of controversial, "sweater-snagging" Brutalist buildings such as Boston City Hall or Yale's Rudolph Hall, just two of his buildings that have been under threat of destruction. But there is another period in his career that is lesser known than the East Coast concrete bohemoths threatened by preservation battles and arson. Rudolph helped to pioneer American modernism in a very different context: delicate, wood beach homes in Florida.