Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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O Great Seer, Thank you, thank you, thank you for posting all of these links! My hope is that this thread will be a valuable reference tool for FLW fans, students, or just for fun.
And now for my suggestion. This is for anyone posting a reply to this thread: in your subject line, please put the name of the site you are referencing instead of "Re: Challenge: Frank Lloyd Wright". Also, if you made a previous post and forgot to do this, please edit your subject line. Many thanks to all of you, and especially to Seer!
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
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jscurtis
Tourist
Reged: 06/07/05
Posts: 27
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FLW does desert
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Hill
Master Guide
Reged: 10/31/04
Posts: 9224
Loc: Southern California
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the house is still not visible before in GE, but it looks like tarps covering materials and a cleared building site.
In 1951, A.K. Chahroudi had a summer cottage built by Frank Lloyd Wright on Petre Island in Lake Mahopac near Carmel, north of New York City. He also had Wright draw up plans for a much larger residence on the same island. The residence was never built. The island was bought by Joe Masarro and his wife. They are in the process of building - beginning in 2004 - the Wright house that was never built, adhering almost completely to Wright's original plans. Below is the Los Angeles Times article from June 9th. The original print article had a few photos.
Caption: A view of the cantilevered great hall in the Massaro Home at the shore of Lake Mahopac, in Mahopac, N.Y. The home’s most dramatic feature is a 28-foot cantilevered section that juts out over the lake. It's believed to be the largest that Wright ever designed, almost doubling the size of the 15-foot cantilevers of his most famous home design, Fallingwater, near Mill Run, Pa.
(Photo credit: Thomas Williams)
More images here.
Construction on the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home of Joe and Barbara Massaro began in the summer of 2004 on Petre Island on Lake Mahopac. Quote:
Wright, where it belongs A new house is believed to be the first since the architect's death to rise on its intended site.
By Diane Haithman, Times Staff Writer
Colleagues describe Joe Massaro as a can-do kind of guy.
When he heard that 11-acre Petre Island in Lake Mahopac was for sale, the 58-year-old retired contractor spent five months going back and forth to the island by motorboat looking for the owner, leaving notes and dodging dogs protecting the property. When Massaro finally found the owner, he traded him the island for a home on the lake that Massaro and his wife, Barbara, owned.
That characteristic persistence would serve him well when he discovered the island came with an added perk: Frank Lloyd Wright had made preliminary drawings in 1950 for a house on the island for a previous owner, and Massaro made it his mission to built it.
When the 5,000-square-foot single-story, four-bedroom home constructed of glass, concrete and mahogany wood is completed this fall, Wright experts believe it will be the only Wright home design built after his death in the location for which it was intended.
A.K. Charoudi, the owner of Petre Island when Wright drew the plans, had completed the project's guest cottage but ran out of money before the main house could be constructed. Dod Charoudi, A.K.'s son, provided Massaro with the drawings.
The home's most dramatic feature is a 28-foot cantilevered section jutting over the lake, so low that it practically rests on the water. This cantilever is believed to be the largest that Wright ever designed — almost double the size of the 15-foot cantilevers that distinguish Wright's most famous home design, Fallingwater, near Mill Run, Pa., with multiple levels looming over a waterfall.
Of about 1,100 designs the prolific architect created, only about half were built during his lifetime. A number of unbuilt Wright designs, both residences and public buildings, have been constructed since the architect's death in 1959.
According to the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, established in 1940 as the repository of the life work of Wright, only those designs built under the auspices of the foundation's Original Unbuilt Program, completed by architects trained at the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture, can be designated a Frank Lloyd Wright Design.
Massaro engaged in a brief legal battle with the foundation, and neither side is at liberty to provide details. But the upshot is that Massaro will have to call his house "inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright" rather than a Frank Lloyd Wright Design.
"We just couldn't get together," observes Massaro. "But I think they made a big mistake."
Massaro, tall and athletic with a New Yorker's rapid-fire speech, dismisses problems with a brisk "fuggedaboud it!" He feels the same way about the opinion of the foundation. Although he was not a Frank Lloyd Wright buff at the beginning, now he is determined to see the house built to Wright's specifications — no matter what it's called.
"I took it on as a hobby," Massaro says. "I said: 'Let's see how far we can push this.' "
Massaro struggled for five years to get building permits from a variety of entities, but in the interim sold his HVAC contracting company, which provided him with the funds to build the house. He refuses to say how much it will cost, but his standard line is: "I budgeted $500,000, and I have exceeded that." Other sources close to the project estimate between $1.5 million and $3 million.
Even without the endorsement of the Wright foundation, the Massaro house is garnering attention from the architectural world. "Many of the houses that are being constructed now are being built according to plans, but not where Wright sited them," says James Libby, a filmmaker who is producing and directing a documentary on the house, expected to be completed in the fall.
"One of the most interesting aspects of Wright is his philosophical concepts, his organic architecture, buildings that are married to the ground. We are using this house to explore these ideas," Libby continues. "There is absolutely no mistake about where this house belongs."
That becomes evident as soon as you encounter the "whale rock." The entrance to the Massaro house is fashioned around a massive boulder, approximately 12 feet wide, 12 feet tall and 60 feet long, that naturally occurs on the island. The "tail rock" — part of the same stone that emerges farther along — will form a wall for the dining room and a bedroom.
According to the Wright foundation, there have been 15 "built unbuilt" designs constructed under the foundation's aegis since 1959, including homes and public buildings. The list includes Monona Terrace Convention Center in Madison, Wis., designed in 1938 but not constructed until the late 1990s, and Blue Sky Mausoleum in Buffalo, N.Y., designed in 1928 and completed in 2004.
A 16th structure, a private home originally designed in 1956 for Panama City, is going through the permitting process for construction near Santa Rosa in Sonoma County, under the supervision of Taliesin architect Arnold Roy.
Though one can never know what design changes might have taken place during the construction process if Wright had been alive, foundation board chairman Vernon D. Swaback believes that those projects completed by architects trained by the school, based at the Taliesin and Taliesin West campuses in Wisconsin and Arizona, respectively — offer the best odds of accurately predicting and executing the late architect's vision.
But, as Swaback acknowledges, those architects who worked under Wright are aging, and building codes and material continue to change. The foundation, he says, reviews its policies to ensure that Frank Lloyd Wright designs keep up with contemporary standards without interfering with "the clarity of the Frank Lloyd Wright heritage."
Massaro has hired Thomas A. Heinz, 50, of Libertyville, Ill., as architect of record to complete the house based on Wright's preliminary design. Heinz isn't affiliated with Taliesin but has written books on Wright and Greene & Greene, and built exact replicas of Wright's furniture designs.
During a visit to the site last fall, the weather was less than ideal for a boat ride to Petre Island. Still, the day was temperate compared with the conditions throughout the frigid early months of 2004 when Massaro and a revolving crew of about 25 workers made multiple shuttles between shore and island.
To solve the problem of transporting the materials across water, Massaro suggested waiting until the lake froze solid. Those trips took place not by boat, but in three John Deere Gator tractors, driven across the frozen lake as if it were a stretch of icy interstate highway — hauling tons of concrete, sand and gravel on round-bottomed makeshift sleds, fashioned of oil tanks cut in half lengthwise.
Hand-pouring the concrete for the 2-foot-thick cantilevered floor took 36 hours and a revolving crew of about 80 people, says the project's general contractor, Lidia Wusatowska-Leghpon. Including the portion of the cantilever that is above land, employing only one support, the total length is 87 feet.
Over the years, Wright's Fallingwater's concrete cantilevers have proved notoriously troublesome, developing substantial cracks and tension stress that has necessitated several major reconstructions. For the Massaro house, more modern post-tensioning techniques will be used to prevent such problems.
The house, which the Massaros plan to use as a summer retreat, will include modern updates such as energy-efficient windows and better insulation and roofing than were available in the 1950s. But per Wright's design, the home will have small bedrooms and bathrooms. Closets will be a bit larger than was typical in the early 1950s, but might be considered inadequate to modern tastes.
Heinz, who has devoted much of his life's work to Wright, believes he is as capable as any Taliesin architect of seeing that work of art realized. "What Joe told me he wanted was the house that Frank Lloyd Wright would have done," Heinz said. "He is not so concerned about official or unofficial, he just wanted what Frank Lloyd Wright intended. Joe is a contractor, and contractors are always, I feel, like the cowboys — 'Let's go.' "
The only deliberate design change that Massaro is making in the main house is to include three stained-glass windows that his wife designed. He has already installed one in the guest house, glowing red, green and yellow in the chaos of the construction.
"I really didn't have to worry about it until they gave me the building permit; I walked away saying, 'My God, I really have to do this now.' I mean, when do you get an opportunity like this in your lifetime?" Massaro says.
"If I'd gotten all the permits right away, I wouldn't have had the money to build it," he added. "It was like Frank Lloyd Wright was there, pushing me all the way."
Edited by Hill (06/27/08 09:12 PM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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Spring Green, Wisc.: Wright first began building a home on this 600-acre site in rural Wisconsin in 1911, and it remained a work in progress until his death in 1959. His beloved "Taliesin," Welsh for “shining brow,” was destroyed by fire twice, the first of which was deliberately set by a crazed employee who blocked all of the exits, then murdered eight of the occupants with a hatchet as they tried to escape the blaze. Wright was not there at the time, but among those killed were his lover Mamah Cheney and two of her children. While designing a home for Cheney’s husband, Wright began a torrid love affair with Mamah, subsequently abandoning his wife and six children for her. Needless to say, Wright was devastated by the tragedy, but he began rebuilding the house, only to have it burn again in 1922. He rebuilt a third time, and this house still stands today. Numerous other Wright structures are scattered across the idyllic farmscape, including barns, a home for his sister, a school, and a chapel, as well as his “Romeo and Juliet” Windmill. The house and grounds are open for tours: see website below. Since the area is in low-res, I have added a map overlay to show detail.
7/19/05 -- I have added more placemarks to show the locations of the FLW Visitor Center, Tan-Y-Deri, Midway Barns, Hillside Home School, and Unity Chapel. In addition, if you click on each icon, you can view a photo of the structure.
Taliesin Preservation
Edited by Yellowstone (07/20/05 05:29 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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Phoenix, Ariz.: This house, which is sometimes referred to as "Shiprock," was commissioned by sisters Rose and Gertrude Pauson of San Francisco. Just three years after its construction in 1939, embers from the fireplace ignited some nearby curtains and the house burned to the ground. The desertstone ruins remained for nearly forty years before being destroyed by a road construction project. The chimney was saved and placed at the entrance to a nearby subdivision. I have added an overlay of a 1975 aerial photo to show its location.
The Chimney today
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (11/20/05 07:28 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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Bethesda, MD.:
Wright designed this rather modest Usonian "hemicycle" for his son Robert Llewellyn Wright in 1953. He had designed a similar house in Virginia for National Geographic writer and photographer Luis Marden, and particularly coveted the home's spectacular site overlooking the Potomac River. Marden refused to sell, however, so the house was built in nearby Bethesda.
More Info
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (06/22/05 08:49 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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McLean, Va.: Wright designed this house overlooking the Potomac River for National Geographic writer and photographer Luis Marden and his mathematician wife Ethel in 1952. This tribute to Marden says it all:
"Luis Marden was, besides a brilliant photo-journalist who pioneered 35mm color and underwater photography, a self-taught polymath interested in virtually everything, a linguist who spoke 6 languages and read hieroglyphics, a real renaissance guy who got along with people as diverse as King Hussein of Jordan, Jacques Cousteau, Bushmen and Eskimo hermits. Marden was a connoisseur of the world's diverse cultures, a bibliophile, and an art lover who convinced Frank Lloyd Wright to design a house for him. He was a pilot, an underwater archaeologist who found the HMS Bounty, a sailor who replotted the course of Columbus' maiden voyage. He was a naturalist who discovered a rare orchid and an underwater flea. And he brought it all home beautifully to the readers of the Geographic, whose mission of exploring "the world and all that is in it" he truly embodied." [source]
I can't imagine a more fitting residence for Marden than an FLW house -- this hemicycle design is very similar to the nearby Robert Llewellyn Wright House.
More Info
Update 12/29/05: Thanks to a recent article in the Washington Post Magazine and imagery from Windows Live Local, I have discovered that I had incorrectly placemarked the Marden House (corrected placemark attached). In the GE imagery, the house is almost invisible, and it is dwarfed by its monstrous next door neighbor, "The Falls," the brand new 21,000-square-foot home of AOL founder James V. Kimsey. Fortunately, Kimsey bought the Marden house to protect his view, and it is now being restored, although it will not be open to the public. Click here to view the article and photos. P. S. I just discovered that Marden's name for the house was "Fontinalis."
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (12/29/05 06:04 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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Phoenix, Ariz.: Here are two neighboring FLW houses not far from the Arizona Biltmore Hotel.
Jorgine Boomer House (1953)
"Jorgine Boomer, a member of the Dupont family. Her husband, Lucius Messenger Boomer, was president and chairman of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. Before her husband's death in 1947, the Boomers and the Adelmans came to the Biltmore Hotel in the winter where they might be found playing bridge with Mamie Eisenhower.
Description: 1,413 square foot home designed for a single person, with separate servant's and chauffeur's quarters. The compact two story house has a equilateral parallelogram footprint and is built around a central chimney flue. Wright described his design, which is virtually identical to the home he did for George Clark on the Carmel seaside in 1951, as a "mountain cottage". It is constructed with desert rubblestone walls and horizontal wood sheathing especially evident in the bedroom balcony."
Benjamin Adelman House (1951)
"Second home built for the Adelman family of Milwaukee. Originally designed as an inexpensive winter retreat, the Usonian house was composed of two concrete block buildings connected by a covered walkway. It had a two story living room and a kitchen with natural lighting from glass openings in the patterned block. Ceilings were suspended from concrete beams. Typical of Wright homes, halls were narrow and the bedrooms small. It featured another innovation which Wright is credited with inventing and naming: a carport."
[Source]
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (06/22/05 06:29 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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Paradise Valley, Ariz.:
"Harold Price, Sr. (1888-1962). Price was one of Wright's most important clients. In 1952 he visited Wright at Taliesin to discuss the building of a modest multi-story building to serve as offices for his international pipeline construction firm, the H. C. Price Company. When he left, Wright had been engaged to build the Price Tower, a nineteen-floor mixed residential, retail and office tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Wright also designed homes for the Price children.
Description: The 4,781 square foot house was executed in concrete block with a light steel frame. The elongated building stretches the length of a football field along a hill east of Tatum Road. It has 10 rooms arranged in 4 areas which can each be closed off from the rest of the house. Each of the 5 master bedrooms and 2 servant's bedrooms have their own baths. Bedroom wings on the east and west, and the living room and kitchen surround an open-air atrium at the center of the building. The roof of the atrium floats two feet above the walls on narrow steel pylons atop massive massive concrete block columns which end short of the ceiling and taper toward the floor. A skylight illuminates a fountain in the center of the atrium.
Subsequent owner: In 1964 the Price estate sold the home to Sam Shoen when he moved the headquarters of U-Haul, the company which he founded and ran, to Phoenix from Portland, OR. At that time there were 11 little Shoens ranging from 2 to 23 years in age. There were destined to be 12 Shoen children in corporate America's most dysfunctional family."
[Source]
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (06/22/05 06:39 AM)
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Yellowstone
Cartographer
Reged: 04/18/05
Posts: 350
Loc: Maryland, USA
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McCook, Nebr.: "The two-story frame and stucco Prairie style house was built for Mr. and Mrs. Harvey P. Sutton. Sutton owned a jewelry store in McCook, was active in community affairs, and served as director of the C.B.&Q. Railroad Concert Band, known throughout the state. The house was designed by renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright in 1905 and was completed in 1908."
[Source]
-------------------- The Covered Bridge Collection
The Legend of the Pink Lady [Warning: Viewer Discretion Advised]
The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright ~ 89 sites and counting....
Edited by Yellowstone (06/22/05 02:41 PM)
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