Thomas Gould Jr. House

Offered for sale for the second time in 100 years.

The only Greene and Greene designed home in Ventura County, CA.

402 Lynn Drive
Ventura, CA

Property Elements

Bright living room with exposed wood beams, two leather chairs, a bench with cushions, potted plant, side table with lamp, and large windows overlooking garden.

The Thomas Gould Jr. House in Ventura, California is an American Craftsman style California bungalow built in 1924. The Gould House was designed by Henry Mather Greene of the architectural firm Greene and Greene, and is the only Greene and Greene design in Ventura.

Read more….


A Historic Conversation with Ventura Historian Cynthia Thompson

  • The story behind the Gould and Bartlett families

  • What qualifies a home for the National Register

  • Why this property is considered
    one of Ventura’s most significant architectural treasures


Illustration of a two-story house with landscaping

ā€œWe always called this house ā€˜Nana’s house’. She was the one who designed it.ā€

—Robert Gould, Grandson

Gould House Inspiration

Plein Air Ventura County Captures the Spirit of Greene and Gould

10 Fascinating Facts

About the Thomas Gould Jr. House

  • Built in 1924, this is one of the last homes ever designed by Henry Mather Greene—and the only Greene & Greene home in Ventura. It is also the most documented Greene & Greene design.

  • Mabel studied botany at Stanford in the late 1800s and not only collaborated directly with Greene on the home’s design and floorplan but with Theodore Payne on the landscape.

  • The home cost $30,000 to build in 1924.

  • The hand-stacked stone walls and planters around the property were built without mortar. Workers wore gloves to avoid disturbing the moss already growing on the stones.

  • Greene designed the gorgeous art glass in the dining room to highlight Mabel Gould’s love of nature. The glass used to be the doors to the China cabinet that was repurposed into a window in the 1980s to allow light to illuminate the design.

  • Both fireplaces feature original Batchelder tile, a hallmark of early 20th-century California artistry.

  • The home was carefully sited by Greene to follow the sun, prevailing breezes, and the natural contours of the land.

  • Landscape legend Theodore Payne personally planted the original grounds, now a certified natural wildlife habitat filled with butterflies and hummingbirds.

  • In the 1980s, Randell Makinson—first Director of the Gamble House—added a respectful second-story extension. kitchen and garage.

  • Two original ponds grace the property—one transformed into a peaceful Zen garden with a bubbling fountain, the other newly planted with water lilies. 

The Gould House Certified Wildlife Habitat