subtilitas:

Frank Lloyd Wright(ish) - Massaro house, Petre Island NY 1950-2004. Via

posted on 13.05.06

pukefest:

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Auldbrass Plantation, Beaufort County, South Carolina - New York Times article about the restoration

posted on 13.04.10

jesseangelo:

Chicago’s landmark The Rookery. Designed and completed by Burnham & Root in 1888, the lobby was remodeled by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1905. 

jesseangelo:

Chicago’s landmark The Rookery. Designed and completed by Burnham & Root in 1888, the lobby was remodeled by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1905. 

posted on 13.04.10

archimess:

Taliesin Architects HQ

archimess:

Taliesin Architects HQ

(Source: larameeee)

posted on 13.02.28

designsbyfranklloydwright:

“La Miniatura,” Frank Lloyd Wright’s Millard house (1923), Pasadena, California

posted on 13.02.27

calumet412:

Plans for Frank Lloyd Wright’s National Insurance Building, 1924, Chicago.

Meant to have been built on North Michigan Ave at Chicago Ave, the glass and copper facade proved to be too expensive for developers. This building is often cited as the greatest FLW structure that was never built.

posted on 13.01.19

arzitekt:

Plan for Greater Baghdad - Frank Lloyd Wright

“A great culture deserves not only architecture of its time, but of its own”

Wright’s 1957 plan distilled an imagined memory of the ancient Abbasid city and went back even further to one of the oldest myths of mankind, the story of Adam and Eve. Quite apart from the political events that scuppered it, it was dismissed by modernist commentators at the time as an anachronistic phantasmagoria. But Mina Marefat persuasively argues that Wright’s work stands as a valuable symbol today, by showing profound respect for the very cultural heritage to which the west can be hostile. ‘The functions of an opera house, a civic centre and a university were clearly modern ones,’ she says, ‘but Wright gave them forms that linked them to the past and imbued them with didactic cultural messages, collective images shared by both east and west.’ Though the realization of Wright’s project would now be less imaginable than ever, it’s worth pausing to remember than when America’s greatest architect drew up a blueprint for Baghdad it was not chauvinistically western, nor an American attempt to destroy Iraqi culture. It was made in a spirit that future architects for the city might do well to study.

posted on 13.01.13

architectureofdoom:

cstorozkova:

Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright at Florida Southern College

Lucius Pond Ordway Building, 1952

architectureofdoom:

cstorozkova:

Architecture by Frank Lloyd Wright at Florida Southern College

Lucius Pond Ordway Building, 1952

(Source: cstorozkova)

posted on 12.11.26

acidadebranca:

ARCHITECTURAL COLOR SKETCHES | 1181 | FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT  | SOURCE  

acidadebranca:

ARCHITECTURAL COLOR SKETCHES | 1181 | FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT  | SOURCE  

posted on 12.07.30

alapiseira:

Plan [162]
archimaps:

Wright’s plan for the Willits House, Highland Park, Illinois

alapiseira:

Plan [162]

archimaps:

Wright’s plan for the Willits House, Highland Park, Illinois

posted on 12.06.08

flashbackdandies:

wandrlust:
Sturges House, Frank Lloyd Wright, Brentwood, California, 1939 — Pedro E. Guerrero

flashbackdandies:

wandrlust:

Sturges House, Frank Lloyd Wright, Brentwood, California, 1939 — Pedro E. Guerrero

posted on 12.04.19

architizer:

Wright’s Key project for Ellis Island in 1959, New York Harbor [reblogged via archimaps]

architizer:

Wright’s Key project for Ellis Island in 1959, New York Harbor [reblogged via archimaps]

posted on 12.02.01

acidadebranca:

Black & White Plans
[678]
Fallingwater is constructed on three levels primarily of reinforced concrete, native sandstone and glass. Soaring cantilevered balconies are anchored in solid rock. Walls of glass form the south exposure, and a vertical shaft of mitered glass merges with stone and steel to overlook the stream.
via

acidadebranca:

Black & White Plans

[678]

Fallingwater is constructed on three levels primarily of reinforced concrete, native sandstone and glass. Soaring cantilevered balconies are anchored in solid rock. Walls of glass form the south exposure, and a vertical shaft of mitered glass merges with stone and steel to overlook the stream.

via

posted on 11.12.25

paavo:

Frank Lloyd Wright’s National Life Insurance Building. 
A 25 story Goliath that was to be built on Michigan Ave [Chicago] at the end of the Magnificent Mile, Wright’s concept involved a pylon core and cantilevered floor plates. 
Archinect : School Blog Project : University of Illinois Chicago (Matthew) : Week 6… or 7? (“Visionary Chicago” project)

paavo:

Frank Lloyd Wright’s National Life Insurance Building.

A 25 story Goliath that was to be built on Michigan Ave [Chicago] at the end of the Magnificent Mile, Wright’s concept involved a pylon core and cantilevered floor plates. 

Archinect : School Blog Project : University of Illinois Chicago (Matthew) : Week 6… or 7? (“Visionary Chicago” project)

posted on 11.04.19

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