Affordable Wright Inspired midcentury
Affordable Wright Inspired midcentury
Could this be an interesting project for a Wright Chatter?
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/202- ... e=txtshare
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/202- ... e=txtshare
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- Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 7:48 am
Judging by the number of presumably dead cars strewn around the house when viewed on Google Earth, I'd say it's in need of a little love ... 

Docent, Hollyhock House - Hollywood, CA
Humble student of the Master
"Youth is a circumstance you can't do anything about. The trick is to grow up without getting old." - Frank Lloyd Wright
Humble student of the Master
"Youth is a circumstance you can't do anything about. The trick is to grow up without getting old." - Frank Lloyd Wright
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There are some condition issues.Roderick Grant wrote:I don't understand the price: $160K, $673/mo. on 4 acres in a beautiful neighborhood in the home of Post Toasties and Kellogg's Corn Flakes. Too cheap. There must be something wrong with it.
So was the previous owner a ham radio hobbyist, or did they just have really poor TV reception in that location before they got the satellite dish? That's a damn sturdy antenna tower for a residential site.
I thought the same thing. Verticality can be effective, but in this case, I was already considering ripping them out in my imaginary renovation!SDR wrote:I like it. And to be a good bet on wooded land, it needs only a metal, slate or tile roof to be secure from almost any surprise holocaust ?
The interiors are only marred, if at all, by the band of vertical boards, above the "datum," that want so much to be horizontal !
S
The only way that was going to work was if the color of that boarded band was completely consistent -- as the designer may have expected. Architects learn and re-learn the same lesson: specify everything.
The benefit of short boards is that all joints are part of the aesthetic system -- and the carpenters can use fall (scrap) from other work for the pieces. The first reason perhaps explains so many examples of vertical-boarded siding in the modernist canon . . .
SDR
The benefit of short boards is that all joints are part of the aesthetic system -- and the carpenters can use fall (scrap) from other work for the pieces. The first reason perhaps explains so many examples of vertical-boarded siding in the modernist canon . . .
SDR
Quite interesting. The architect clearly "got it" in terms of Usonian style. And terrazo floors throughout ain't cheap. The vertical boards didn't jump out at me so much as the oddly angular fireplace. This may have been an instance where observing the grid results in some odd and severe angles. My "mental renovation" would include some cabinets or a table to either side of the fireplace to soften those sharp corners.
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The proper method of producing odd-shaped brick is to form it at the manufactory. I'm not aware of a Wright building with original cut corner brick.
When his clients could not afford the expense -- or perhaps when Mr Wright preferred the "woven" corners -- the result was the same as we see here.
There are numerous examples of both approaches in the catalog of Wright's work, though I believe the majority of them date to the Prairie years . . .
SDR
When his clients could not afford the expense -- or perhaps when Mr Wright preferred the "woven" corners -- the result was the same as we see here.
There are numerous examples of both approaches in the catalog of Wright's work, though I believe the majority of them date to the Prairie years . . .
SDR