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Frederick C. Robie House, Chicago, 1908

Frank Lloyd Wright

 

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Great pictures. Impressive house - amazed to think it is 100+ years old.

Thank you. Robie was an automobile enthusiast. Wright gave him a three car attached garage with a service pit, when urban houses at that time were still being built with coach houses to accommodate horses.

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Ahh !! THE Robie House!! Your images do the house justice, even a midday sun flatters & accentuates the Wright trademark large overhangs. Nice!!

 Maybe we should start a thread @ FLW works. :)

Thanks. Yes the overhangs are spectacular long cantilevers on this house, the essence of the Prairie Style.

I agree, a thread of FLW's work is a good idea.

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Great pictures. Impressive house - amazed to think it is 100+ years old.

Isn't it

 

It must have looked totally alien back then, and shocked all manner of people - totally "out of the box". The coverage of the Tour yesterday had some helicopter shots of Le Corbusier's house in Poissy (Villa Savoye). That too must have looked alien but that was 20 years after the FLW house

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Isn't it

 

It must have looked totally alien back then, and shocked all manner of people - totally "out of the box". The coverage of the Tour yesterday had some helicopter shots of Le Corbusier's house in Poissy (Villa Savoye). That too must have looked alien but that was 20 years after the FLW house

 

The Villa Savoye (and most Le Corbusier houses I know of) seem more technical and cold than Wright’s houses. I think I would have difficulty living with some of Wright’s furniture. But I would have difficulty living in the Villa Savoye at all. A bit like some of the painting of the time – intellectually stimulating, but can be uncomfortable on the wall and often hard to call beautiful. I am left with the feeling that Wright was more mindful of his client than was Le Corbusier.

Edited by Michael Hiles
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Isn't it

 

It must have looked totally alien back then, and shocked all manner of people - totally "out of the box". The coverage of the Tour yesterday had some helicopter shots of Le Corbusier's house in Poissy (Villa Savoye). That too must have looked alien but that was 20 years after the FLW house

 

 

The Villa Savoye (and most Le Corbusier houses I know of) seem more technical and cold than Wright’s houses. I think I would have difficulty living with some of Wright’s furniture. But I would have difficulty living in the Villa Savoye at all. A bit like some of the painting of the time – intellectually stimulating, but can be uncomfortable on the wall and often hard to call beautiful. I am left with the feeling that Wright was more mindful of his client than was Le Corbusier.

Along with Mies, they were visionary architects whose ideas were not universally accepted at the time. However, we take for granted and enjoy many of these ideas in our homes today that  evolved from those early 20th century ideas.   You have to applaud the clients who "allowed" them to experiment with their money!  

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Robert Silman, a structural engineer who rescued Frank Lloyd Wright’s cantilevered Fallingwater in Pennsylvania from the edge of collapse, and preserved dozens of other landmarks besides, died on July 31 at his home in Great Barrington, Mass. He was 83. -From thw New York Times

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