Frank Lloyd Wright Design Theory
Frank Lloyd Wright is one of the most well-known architects in United States history. The buildings he created have a distinctive flow, both inside and out, which either draws or distracts the viewer. His most famous project is probably Fallingwater, a house he built for Edgar Kaufman and his wife just outside of Pittsburgh. This home is built with an incorporated waterfall that was supposed to bring the occupants closer to nature, and showed off an element of design that was a hallmark of Wright's work. This essay looks at two Frank Lloyd Wright houses, and the design concept that made him the country's most famous architect.
It is important to understand, briefly, who Frank Lloyd Wright was and how he developed his distinctive style. He was born in Wisconsin in a small town to unassuming parents. At 15, he went to the University of Wisconsin at Madison to become an engineer because "they had no school of architecture" (Hurder, 2001). When he left the university at 20, he apprenticed to several small architectural firms in Chicago as a drafter before he landed a job with Louis Sullivan, who at the time was the most prominent architect in the Midwest. Quickly, he became Sullivan's chief assistant, but he was too much of a free spirit to remain very long the lackey of someone else, so he left and started his own firm (Hurder, 2011).
His style was developing as he passed through his architectural growing pains, but he was forging a style that would become world famous. Wright lived in a suburb of Chicago with his wife and rapidly expanding family and his growing architectural firm housed in the same building. From 1889, when he started his firm, until 1900 he designed more than 60 homes in and around Chicago that were taking on the shapes that would become known as the Prairie style (Hurder, 2011). "Houses with low-pitched roofs and extended lines that blend into the landscape typify his style of "organic architecture" (Hurder, 2011), were to be his life's work. He wanted to build houses that became a part of the landscape they inhabited.
Fallingwater
It is, from very first glance, easy to see the design scheme of Wright worked in this piece. It is a piece of art that not only does not detract from the surrounding area, but seems to add to it. "Perhaps the most striking single feature of Fallingwater is the cantilevered reinforced concrete balconies that extend out over the falls" (Aikens, 2009). The cantilever is a means of allowing the concrete slabs to extend further out than they normally would have been able to. The reason he used the feature is obvious. He was trying to match the line of the stone and make the building blend, in abstract form, to its surroundings. The indie of the structure has received almost as much study as the out for Wright's attempt to bring the outside in. Peponis and Bellal (2010) in an article describing the tenets of how space is designed into a project said
"the flexible, open plain [of the main living room] is loosely organized around a central atrium-like space, illuminated from above by a large, nearly square, recessed ceiling panel, which is supported at its four corners by stone piers & #8230; The various functions are zoned into pockets of space that pinwheel around its open core, sometimes overlapping and sometimes projecting from it."
The entire structure, both inside and out, has been studied by engineers, architectural students, and lay people with a love for interesting architecture since it was completed in 1939.
The problems with the design began even before it was completed. Engineers at the time were not fully versed in the structural properties of concrete, and neither was Mr. Wright. The fact that significant portions of two different balconies projected over Bear Run falls in the design, show the boldness with which Wright attacked projects even if it was not clear how they were to be finished in reality. Using present materials and methods of construction, the design would have posed few problems. But, at the time, concrete was a relatively new material, and all of its properties were not fully understood. According to an article in AI Architect,
"As the use of concrete has become more widespread over the years, more has been learned, and today there are many tools to employ, such as higher strength concrete, high-tensile reinforcing steel, and more advanced curing techniques to apply after the concrete has been placed in the formwork. Reshoring, or temporary...
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