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News and updates from the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
Though Wright conceived of Community Christian Church as “the church of the future,” financial considerations, wartime material shortages, and restrictive building codes forced him to abandon many of his original visions for the space.
Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation | Feb 4, 2017
James Charnley, a longtime friend of Louis Sullivan, commissioned Adler & Sullivan to design his home in 1890.
A limestone bluff above Iowa’s Wapsipinicon River provides a stunning setting for the complex of buildings that served as a summer retreat for Lowell Walter, a Des Moines businessman, and his wife.
Wright designed Blue Sky Mausoleum at the request of Darwin D. Martin, the secretary of the Larkin Soap Company (Wright’s first public commission) and Wright’s longtime friend.
Each element of Wright’s only synagogue was carefully designed with a contemporary approach to Jewish faith, history and religious practice.
In 1938 Frank Lloyd Wright was entering the most productive period of his life and, once again, was in the media spotlight.
This house is an example of Frank Lloyd Wright’s classic Usonian architecture.
The B. Harley Bradley House (also known as “Glenlloyd”) is a major transitional work that marks the beginning of Wright’s Prairie style.
Wright maintained a lifelong interest in prefabricated housing, as demonstrated by his American Systems-Built Houses of 1911-1917.