8 comments

  • gabrielsroka 9 minutes ago
  • diabllicseagull 10 minutes ago
    Fallingwater has just gone through a series of renovations and all areas are now accessible. If you haven't seen it yet, now is a great time.
  • linksnapzz 19 minutes ago
    If you'd like, you can still speak to the last living client (as of last year) of FLW; still living in the house the architect designed for him:

    https://alumni.cornell.edu/cornellians/reisley-wright-last-c...

  • mynegation 1 hour ago
    Fallingwater is more than work of art, it is a religious experience. I visited it three times (each time my visit to Pittsburgh and the area surrounding the house was to specifically see it) and every damn time I stood weeping leaving the tour.
  • zdw 1 hour ago
    If you ever visit Taliesin in Wisconsin (which has a pretty bland), you should also visit the nearby House on the Rock which is a fascinating and very weird collection of esoteric and kitschy items.

    The contrast in attitudes and aesthetics between the two is incredibly stark, and it's very interesting to see the reactions of visitors to each location.

    • kiernanmcgowan 37 minutes ago
      This is, by far, one of the weirdest places I've ever visited. Tonal whiplash is an understatement.
  • iwontberude 21 minutes ago
    If you haven't visited falling water, definitely go. It's American architecture at its finest.
  • Lost-Futures 1 hour ago
    As student I had privilege of visiting Taliesin West in Arizona. Easily my favorite architect, a true artist.
    • kev009 57 minutes ago
      I remember rumors going around Phoenix of someone trying to demolish the David and Gladys Wright House in 2011. Someone got a great deal on it around that time, $1m. It sold with a 7-10x return a a few years later.

      Viewed in isolation it is a bit underwhelming, but if you see it in landscape it has a charm. I think a copper roof on both structures would make it pop.

  • crooked-v 1 hour ago
    I'm sad that we're coming up towards 100 years on from Fallingwater being built, and yet the American preference for new houses of a similar price (after inflation) is the sort of awful stuff that shows up on mcmansionhell.com.
    • nullc 27 minutes ago
      The kind of bespoke construction in Wright's buildings couldn't be built today at an order of magnitude higher price, even considering inflation. A side effect of mass produced standard construction materials has been custom ones becoming astronomically expensive due to the skilled labor to build them having been replaced with mass production.

      I suspect projects like fallingwater have siting considerations that wouldn't allow it to be built at all anywhere in the US... isn't it built basically on top of a WOTUS?

    • tptacek 1 hour ago
      The instinct to preserve and honor Frank Lloyd Wright in Oak Park, where I live, has basically frozen the place in amber, which isn't something Wright would have wanted, and also worked synergistically with exclusive zoning to keep the Village ultra-expensive (it directly abuts the Austin neighborhood in Chicago, which is low-middle income) and white (unlike Austin, which is 90+% Black).

      No idea what Wright would have thought about racial housing segregation, but it was certainly a knock-on effect of the preservationist cult he accidentally created.

    • ramesh31 1 hour ago
      People want square footage and comfort, not design. Frank Lloyd Wright homes look stunning in an Architectural Digest spread, but living in them is not really up to par for modern standards.
      • linksnapzz 31 minutes ago
        The newest homes that FLW had a hand in building date from 1959.

        By the standards of the time, they were comfortable (if a bit lacking in closet space).

        If you'd like, you can buy a modernized kit Usonian (inspired by the Jacobs I house) from Lindal here:

        https://lindal.com/home-designs/madison/

        • hibikir 16 minutes ago
          That hous is still extremely small for what most people in the US would put in a full sized suburban lot: Nowadays a median build is 2300 square feet (213 square meters). It makes that 1600 square feet look very small. The hallways, the large space dedicated to a great room and just 2 bedrooms won't help.

          You will find new houses that small, but typically when it's extremely high value land, so typically infill. And then chances are it's a multi story house that fits the lot to the limit.

      • WillPostForFood 54 minutes ago
        The main house uses 9,300 square feet of which 4,400 is outdoor terraces, while the guest house totals 4,990 square feet of which 1,950 square feet is outdoor terraces.

        https://fallingwater.org/media-resources/fallingwater-facts/