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Frank Lloyd Wright architecture at Florida Southern University, Lakeland Florida.

There is a 1.5 mile long network of covered paths designed by Wright which connect the buildings on the campus.

 

Florida Southen College is home to the largest collection of buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in existence. There are 12 buildings on campus, along with a network of covered esplanades, and a total of 18 buildings were designed by Wright for the campus.

Pictures from our tour of the house and grounds of Kentuck Knob, a home built for the Hagan (Ice Cream) family by Frank Lloyd Wright. The house, and all of the wonderful artwork, is now owned by Lord Peter Palumbo of London, England.

Laura R. Gale House

franklloydwright.org/frank-lloyd-wright/

"Taliesin West is a UNESCO World Heritage site and National Historic Landmark nestled in the desert foothills of the McDowell Mountains in Scottsdale, AZ. It is also the home of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation and the School of Architecture at Taliesin.

 

Wright’s beloved winter home and the bustling headquarters of the Taliesin Fellowship, was established in 1937 and diligently handcrafted over many years into a world unto itself. Deeply connected to the desert from which it was forged, Taliesin West possesses an almost prehistoric grandeur. It was built and maintained almost entirely by Wright and his apprentices, making it among the most personal of the architect’s creations."

 

Scottsdale, AZ

1937

architect Frank Lloyd Wright

Visit to Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesen West

Scottsdale, AZ

1937

architect Frank Lloyd Wright

First Unitarian Society Meeting House

(#73000076)

900 University Bay Dr.

Shorewood Hills, WI

 

1947, Frank Lloyd Wright

He doesn't look as much like it here, but our tour guide looked like a handsomer Steve Buscemi (and sounded like him, too!)

The proposed addition was to contain an attached garage at grade and a new master bedroom suite at the 2nd floor. The addition design pays homage to the original structure through its use of the board and batten siding, hip roof, stucco and trim, etc. However there is a clear demarcation between the original and proposed in keeping with the Department of the Interior guidelines for additions to historic structures.

gah, lawn in the desert...

yep, those hedges spell 'arizona biltmore'. sigh...plant torture...

The proposed addition roof is a hip as in the existing house. The solar chimney, expressing the elevator below, will house a photo voltaic array to generate electricity.

Frank Lloyd Wright, Xanadu Gallery, San Francisco

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