- Publisher: Horizon
- Topic: Architecture
- Author: Frank Lloyd Wright
- Binding: Hardcover
- Subject: monograph
- Special Attributes: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Original/Facsimile: Original
- Place of Publication: USA
- Year Printed: 1956
Posts tagged story
The Story Of The Tower: The tree that escaped the crowded forest. 1956 Horizon Press First Edition 1. Printing hardcover with jacket. The Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma is an innovative building that changed the horizon of the Oklahoma prairie and the world of architecture. The tower was constructed for the H. Price Company as its world headquarters. The Price Tower is Frank Lloyd Wright’s only realized skyscraper. Wright took his inspiration for the cantilevered design from a tree. In fact, the Price Tower has been called the tree that escaped the crowded forest. Wright wrote this book, The Story of the Tower, documenting the Price Tower and its construction. Listing and template services provided by inkFrog. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright Story Of The Tower 1956 Horizon First Edition 1st Printing” is in sale since Thursday, March 11, 2021. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “arkansasbob57″ and is located in Ravenden Springs, Arkansas. This item can be shipped to United States.
THE STORY OF THE TOWER. Author: Wright, Frank Lloyd Title: THE STORY OF THE TOWER Publication: New York: Horizon Press, 1956 Edition: First Edition; First Printing. Description: First Edition; First Printing. Book condition is Very Good; with a Very Good dust jacket. A few small chips to jacket edges. A few faint scratches to jacket. Text is clean and unmarked, illustrated throughout. Signed, dated and inscribed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the year of publication on the front end page. 4to 11″ – 13″ tall; Signed by Author. We offer Rare, Fine & Collectible books in service of the imagination, inspiration and human understanding. We are a “generalist” shop, with a burgeoning focus on psychology, philosophy, science, the fine and domestic arts, signed books, limited editions and materials related to various esoteric aesthetics. For our complete inventory of Rare, Collectible and otherwise worthwhile titles. This listing was created by Bibliopolis. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright / THE STORY OF THE TOWER Signed 1st Edition 1956″ is in sale since Tuesday, July 7, 2020. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “evolvinglensbookseller33″ and is located in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. This item can be shipped to United States, United Kingdom, Denmark, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Czech republic, Finland, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Estonia, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Cyprus, Slovenia, Japan, Sweden, South Korea, Indonesia, South africa, Thailand, Belgium, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria, Bahamas, Israel, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Switzerland, Norway, Saudi arabia, United arab emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Croatia, Malaysia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Panama, Jamaica, Barbados, Bangladesh, Bermuda, Brunei darussalam, Bolivia, Ecuador, Egypt, French guiana, Guernsey, Gibraltar, Guadeloupe, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan, Cambodia, Cayman islands, Liechtenstein, Sri lanka, Luxembourg, Monaco, Macao, Martinique, Maldives, Nicaragua, Oman, Peru, Pakistan, Paraguay, Reunion, Viet nam, Uruguay, China.
- Author: Wright, Frank Lloyd
- Publisher: Horizon Press
- Year Printed: 1956
- Special Attributes: 1st Edition
- Binding: Hardcover
- Original/Facsimile: Original
THE STORY OF THE TOWER by Frank Lloyd Wright. The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest. 1956 Edition in Dust Jacket. 134 pages, 2 full color fold-outs, 6 color plates and 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. THIS INCLUDES 3 LETTERS FROM THE GENERAL CHAIRMAN OF THE FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT DAY THAT EXPLAINS ADDITIONAL SPECIFICATIONS NOT INCLUDED IN THE BOOK. HE ALSO UNDERLINED THE PERTINENT FACTS OF THE TOWER BEFORE GIFTING THE BOOK TO IRV KUPCINET. HE ALSO SIGNED THE BOOK. Frank Lloyd Wright: THE STORY OF THE TOWER [The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest]. New York: Horizon Press, 1956. Black cloth embossed and decorated in copper and Cherokee red. 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. Interior unmarked and very clean. The book is in very good condition, but the dust jacket is falling apart. 8.75 x 11.25 hardcover book with 134 pages, 2 full color fold-outs, 6 color plates and 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. The Story of the Tower includes all of Frank Lloyd Wright’s writings on this subject, revised and brought up to date for this edition. This concept was revolutionary in the history of architecture publishing: for the first time, the evolution of a buildingfrom original idea to plan to day-by-day construction and finally to completionis presented in one full-length book. The item “1956 Frank Lloyd Wright THE PRICE TOWER STORY With 3 Letters From Chairman To KUP” is in sale since Saturday, August 24, 2019. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “femail007295c” and is located in Encino, California. This item can be shipped worldwide.
Signed and inscribed by Frank Lloyd on front free endpage and placed at Taliesin in 1958. Book itself is rather worn with some chipping to cloth. Repairs made to previously fragile hinges so they are now holding fairly well. Structurally book is otherwise quite sound. No markings besides signature – internally pages are clean and bright. Priced lower to reflect wear. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright SIGNED The Story of the Tower First Edition Hardcover 1956″ is in sale since Friday, November 2, 2018. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “catringfancy” and is located in Amherst, Massachusetts. This item can be shipped to United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Denmark, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Czech republic, Finland, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Estonia, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Cyprus, Slovenia, Japan, Sweden, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, South africa, Belgium, France, Hong Kong, Ireland, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria, Bahamas, Israel, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Norway, Saudi arabia, Ukraine, United arab emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Croatia, Malaysia, Brazil, Colombia, Panama, Jamaica, Barbados, Bangladesh, Bermuda, Brunei darussalam, Bolivia, Ecuador, Egypt, French guiana, Guernsey, Gibraltar, Guadeloupe, Iceland, Jersey, Jordan, Cambodia, Cayman islands, Liechtenstein, Sri lanka, Luxembourg, Monaco, Macao, Martinique, Maldives, Nicaragua, Oman, Peru, Pakistan, Paraguay, Reunion, Viet nam, Chile, Costa rica, Trinidad and tobago, Guatemala, Honduras, Uruguay.
- Special Attributes: Signed
Frank Lloyd Wright: THE STORY OF THE TOWER [The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest]. New York: Horizon Press, 1956. Black cloth embossed and decorated in copper and Cherokee red. 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. Interior unmarked and very clean. Dust jacket edgeworn with chips to front panel and spine ends. A nearly fine copy in a very good dust jacket. I believe this book was owned by E. L Gallery the Vice President and Treasurer of H. Please see business card attached that came with book. 8.75 x 11.25 hardcover book with 134 pages, 2 full color fold-outs, 6 color plates and 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. The Story of the Tower includes all of Frank Lloyd Wright’s writings on this subject, revised and brought up to date for this edition. This concept was revolutionary in the history of architecture publishing: for the first time, the evolution of a buildingfrom original idea to plan to day-by-day construction and finally to completionis presented in one full-length book. From The Price Tower website: The Price Tower is a spectacular building of copper and concrete and stands in the downtown area of Bartlesville, Oklahoma. The tower was built for Harold C. Price as a corporate headquarters for his pipeline construction company. Price had originally thought of a rather modest rectangular building a few stories high, however Frank Lloyd Wright convinced him that it would be more economic and efficient to build up rather than out. The unique form of the Price Tower was originally designed by Wright for downtown New York City in 1929, as one of a cluster of apartment towers, but was nonetheless unrealized due to the effects of the Great Depression upon real estate prices and building material costs. Wright was delighted to have the opportunity to build his tower on the plains of Oklahoma, and he nicknamed the building The Tree that Escaped the Crowded Forest because it had escaped the crowded forests of Manhattan skyscrapers and was now able to cast its own shadow upon its own piece of land. At the time of its construction, from 1953 to 1956, the Price Tower was the tallest building in Bartlesville and on the corner of Dewey Avenue and Sixth Street at the southern edge of the downtown area. The nickname also reflected the structural design of the tower. Frank Lloyd Wright was an organic architect and often chose themes and ideas from nature. The trunk of the Price Tower is made of four elevator shafts and their structural walls. The trunk extends deep underground like a tap root and provides the strong support for the upper floors, whose tapering cantilevered concrete floor slabs are like branches. The outer walls do not support the building, allowing for large expanses of window glass. The exterior of the Price Tower is clad in copper panels and sun louvers, the leaves of the tree, whose color was aided by chemical applications rather than due to the effects of nature upon the material. The building also tapers upward like a tree with the top three floors progressively becoming narrower and the penthouse floor only a single suite of rooms. Wright also wished to visually connect the inside of a building with the landscape outside by using similar materials on both the interior and exterior, such as the copper panels, concrete, and aluminum trim. Large windows drew the eye outside toward the view of the Oklahoma prairie, with Wright preferring not to have draperies or artwork on the walls to distract ones eye from experiencing the beauty. Frank Lloyd Wright was interested in the ways in which a society worked and felt that architecture could both transform and improve the landscape while helping create a more functional society. He believed that mankind should build up rather than out so that in a skyscraper one could both work and live, but also have everything you need in the same building. Rather than having these businesses, stores, and offices along one street, he favored a vertical street where they are stacked into a tall buildinghis definition of a skyscraper that would release land for parks, gardens, and the general enjoyment of the towns citizens. Price Tower was designed as four quadrants based on the geometry of a 30-60-90° double parallelogram moduleone quadrant for double-height apartments and three quadrants for private offices. Initially, there were eight apartments in the building, with Bruce Goff living and working in the Price Tower for nearly nine years. The first and second floors of the Price Tower were designed for retail and housed a womens dress shop, a beauty salon, and the offices of the Public Service Company of Oklahoma. On the floors above there were a variety of professional offices with the Price Company occupying the top seven floors of the tower including a sixteenth-floor commissary where free lunches were prepared and served to their employees. The seventeenth and eighteenth floors housed the Price Company corporate apartment and the companys conference room. The nineteenth floor penthouse was the office suite for H. Price and his assistant. The Price Tower commission also allowed Wright to design objects within the building. He designed built-in furniture, free standing furniture, fixtures, textiles and decorative artwork. Many of the designs were produced locally to his specifications. The cast aluminum chairs were manufactured by Blue Stem Foundry, Dewey, Oklahoma, with the built-in and freestanding wood furniture built on site. The draperies and upholstery fabrics were designed by Wright as part of his Taliesin line of wallpapers and fabrics, and were manufactured by the F. Schumacher Company, New York City, in 1955. The towers murals were also designed by Wright, with the corporate apartments mural being the only one he inscribed and signed. The floors and ceilings of the building are made of reinforced concrete. Frank Lloyd Wright liked to build with concreteit could be molded, colored with pigments, and was durable and easy to maintain. The floors of the Price Tower are dyed Cherokee Red, which was believed to be his favorite color, and used on many of his designs. The powdered pigment was added to the concrete while it was still wetand after pouring, the floors were scored with the geometric double parallelogram module. In February 1956, the Price Tower was opened for the public to tour. In 1979, the lobby of the Price Tower was remodeled by Taliesin Associated Architects, Scottsdale, Arizona, as Frank Lloyd Wrights firm was known following his death. The room was completed with the hanging of copper metal draperies to complement the copper on the exterior of the building. The Price Company enjoyed the time they owned and occupied the Price Tower and the Price family continued to operate the company and work in the tower until 1981, when the company relocated to Dallas, Texas. The Phillips Petroleum Company then owned the building for a number of years using it for office space, and off-site storage. In 1987, the Landmarks Preservation Council of Bartlesville began conducting tours of the Price Tower, continuing to do so until 1998. In 1990, the Bartlesville Museum and Sculpture Garden began presenting exhibitions in the tower. Their first exhibition, The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest, Frank Lloyd Wright and the Price Tower, was a fitting tribute to the Price Towers role in the community. In 1998, The Bartlesville Museum and Sculpture Garden became the Price Tower Arts Center and Phillips Petroleum began to refurbish the tower, making it compliant with current building codes and removing alterations that had been made to the interior spaces. Once completed, Phillips Petroleum then donated the building to the Price Tower Arts Center, who is the current owner of the Price Tower and its city block. In 2003, Inn at Price Tower, a nineteen-room hotel and Copper Bar + Restaurant opened, providing overnight guests the option to fully experience Wrights design. The Price Tower Arts Center galleries now occupies the two-story space once held by the Public Service Company of Oklahoma and the dress shop and beauty salon. In October 2006, the top three floors of the building were reopened following a three- month restoration to their original 1956, appearance, including replacement of furnishings and replication of original draperies and upholstery fabrics. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright The Story of the Tower, 1st Edition, Hardcover in DJ” is in sale since Thursday, October 4, 2018. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “renaissancefire203″ and is located in New Haven, Connecticut. This item can be shipped to United States.
- Year Printed: 1956
- Topic: Architecture
- Binding: Hardcover
- Author: Wright, Frank Lloyd
- Subject: Frank Lloyd Wright
- Original/Facsimile: Original
- Publisher: Horizon Press
- Place of Publication: New York
- Special Attributes: 1st Edition
Frank Lloyd Wright: THE STORY OF THE TOWER [The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest]. New York: Horizon Press, 1956. Black cloth embossed and decorated in copper and Cherokee red. 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. Interior unmarked and very clean. Dust jacket edgeworn with chips to front panel and spine ends. A nearly fine copy in a very good dust jacket. I believe this book was owned by E. L Gallery the Vice President and Treasurer of H. Please see business card attached that came with book. 8.75 x 11.25 hardcover book with 134 pages, 2 full color fold-outs, 6 color plates and 130 black and white photographs, drawings and plans. The Story of the Tower includes all of Frank Lloyd Wright’s writings on this subject, revised and brought up to date for this edition. This concept was revolutionary in the history of architecture publishing: for the first time, the evolution of a buildingfrom original idea to plan to day-by-day construction and finally to completionis presented in one full-length book. From The Price Tower website: The Price Tower is a spectacular building of copper and concrete and stands in the downtown area of Bartlesville, Oklahoma. The tower was built for Harold C. Price as a corporate headquarters for his pipeline construction company. Price had originally thought of a rather modest rectangular building a few stories high, however Frank Lloyd Wright convinced him that it would be more economic and efficient to build up rather than out. The unique form of the Price Tower was originally designed by Wright for downtown New York City in 1929, as one of a cluster of apartment towers, but was nonetheless unrealized due to the effects of the Great Depression upon real estate prices and building material costs. Wright was delighted to have the opportunity to build his tower on the plains of Oklahoma, and he nicknamed the building The Tree that Escaped the Crowded Forest because it had escaped the crowded forests of Manhattan skyscrapers and was now able to cast its own shadow upon its own piece of land. At the time of its construction, from 1953 to 1956, the Price Tower was the tallest building in Bartlesville and on the corner of Dewey Avenue and Sixth Street at the southern edge of the downtown area. The nickname also reflected the structural design of the tower. Frank Lloyd Wright was an organic architect and often chose themes and ideas from nature. The trunk of the Price Tower is made of four elevator shafts and their structural walls. The trunk extends deep underground like a tap root and provides the strong support for the upper floors, whose tapering cantilevered concrete floor slabs are like branches. The outer walls do not support the building, allowing for large expanses of window glass. The exterior of the Price Tower is clad in copper panels and sun louvers, the leaves of the tree, whose color was aided by chemical applications rather than due to the effects of nature upon the material. The building also tapers upward like a tree with the top three floors progressively becoming narrower and the penthouse floor only a single suite of rooms. Wright also wished to visually connect the inside of a building with the landscape outside by using similar materials on both the interior and exterior, such as the copper panels, concrete, and aluminum trim. Large windows drew the eye outside toward the view of the Oklahoma prairie, with Wright preferring not to have draperies or artwork on the walls to distract ones eye from experiencing the beauty. Frank Lloyd Wright was interested in the ways in which a society worked and felt that architecture could both transform and improve the landscape while helping create a more functional society. He believed that mankind should build up rather than out so that in a skyscraper one could both work and live, but also have everything you need in the same building. Rather than having these businesses, stores, and offices along one street, he favored a vertical street where they are stacked into a tall buildinghis definition of a skyscraper that would release land for parks, gardens, and the general enjoyment of the towns citizens. Price Tower was designed as four quadrants based on the geometry of a 30-60-90° double parallelogram moduleone quadrant for double-height apartments and three quadrants for private offices. Initially, there were eight apartments in the building, with Bruce Goff living and working in the Price Tower for nearly nine years. The first and second floors of the Price Tower were designed for retail and housed a womens dress shop, a beauty salon, and the offices of the Public Service Company of Oklahoma. On the floors above there were a variety of professional offices with the Price Company occupying the top seven floors of the tower including a sixteenth-floor commissary where free lunches were prepared and served to their employees. The seventeenth and eighteenth floors housed the Price Company corporate apartment and the companys conference room. The nineteenth floor penthouse was the office suite for H. Price and his assistant. The Price Tower commission also allowed Wright to design objects within the building. He designed built-in furniture, free standing furniture, fixtures, textiles and decorative artwork. Many of the designs were produced locally to his specifications. The cast aluminum chairs were manufactured by Blue Stem Foundry, Dewey, Oklahoma, with the built-in and freestanding wood furniture built on site. The draperies and upholstery fabrics were designed by Wright as part of his Taliesin line of wallpapers and fabrics, and were manufactured by the F. Schumacher Company, New York City, in 1955. The towers murals were also designed by Wright, with the corporate apartments mural being the only one he inscribed and signed. The floors and ceilings of the building are made of reinforced concrete. Frank Lloyd Wright liked to build with concreteit could be molded, colored with pigments, and was durable and easy to maintain. The floors of the Price Tower are dyed Cherokee Red, which was believed to be his favorite color, and used on many of his designs. The powdered pigment was added to the concrete while it was still wetand after pouring, the floors were scored with the geometric double parallelogram module. In February 1956, the Price Tower was opened for the public to tour. In 1979, the lobby of the Price Tower was remodeled by Taliesin Associated Architects, Scottsdale, Arizona, as Frank Lloyd Wrights firm was known following his death. The room was completed with the hanging of copper metal draperies to complement the copper on the exterior of the building. The Price Company enjoyed the time they owned and occupied the Price Tower and the Price family continued to operate the company and work in the tower until 1981, when the company relocated to Dallas, Texas. The Phillips Petroleum Company then owned the building for a number of years using it for office space, and off-site storage. In 1987, the Landmarks Preservation Council of Bartlesville began conducting tours of the Price Tower, continuing to do so until 1998. In 1990, the Bartlesville Museum and Sculpture Garden began presenting exhibitions in the tower. Their first exhibition, The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest, Frank Lloyd Wright and the Price Tower, was a fitting tribute to the Price Towers role in the community. In 1998, The Bartlesville Museum and Sculpture Garden became the Price Tower Arts Center and Phillips Petroleum began to refurbish the tower, making it compliant with current building codes and removing alterations that had been made to the interior spaces. Once completed, Phillips Petroleum then donated the building to the Price Tower Arts Center, who is the current owner of the Price Tower and its city block. In 2003, Inn at Price Tower, a nineteen-room hotel and Copper Bar + Restaurant opened, providing overnight guests the option to fully experience Wrights design. The Price Tower Arts Center galleries now occupies the two-story space once held by the Public Service Company of Oklahoma and the dress shop and beauty salon. In October 2006, the top three floors of the building were reopened following a three- month restoration to their original 1956, appearance, including replacement of furnishings and replication of original draperies and upholstery fabrics. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright The Story of the Tower, 1st Edition, Hardcover in DJ” is in sale since Tuesday, September 4, 2018. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “renaissancefire203″ and is located in New Haven, Connecticut. This item can be shipped to United States.
- Year Printed: 1956
- Topic: Architecture
- Binding: Hardcover
- Author: Wright, Frank Lloyd
- Subject: Frank Lloyd Wright
- Original/Facsimile: Original
- Publisher: Horizon Press
- Place of Publication: New York
- Special Attributes: 1st Edition
Frank Lloyd Wright signed first edition of”The Story of the Tower: The Tree That Escaped the Crowded Forest”, documenting Wright’s design and construction of the Price Tower. Signed”Frank Lloyd Wright / 56” on the front free endpaper. New York: Horizon Press, 1956. Large format book is profusely illustrated with photographs, mock-ups and drawings of the tower, Wright’s only skyscraper in his long career. Measures 8.75” x 11”. With dust jacket, in fair condition as it’s missing part of the backstrip. Book itself is beautifully preserved, in near fine condition. The free listing tool. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright Signed Book”The Story of the Tower’” is in sale since Saturday, September 30, 2017. This item is in the category “Books\Antiquarian & Collectible”. The seller is “n8sautographs” and is located in Los Angeles, California. This item can be shipped worldwide.
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Sullivan Summer House – 1890. Wright’s architectural education consisted almost entirely of the years he spent working in the Chicago office of Louis Sullivan. Several of the residential commissions that came into that office landed on Wright’s desk while Sullivan remained focused on his seminal skyscraper designs. Sullivan was so confident in young Wright’s abilities that he turned over the design of his own summer house to the young man. What you see here is the result, a spacious, ground hugging, gable roofed design with a porch stretching its full length and either end anchored by chimneys. Sadly the home was completely destroyed during Hurricane Katrina. As a work of art these prints are worth purchasing in their own right. For those of you interested in building a historically inspired house, these plans offer an excellent starting point. Outside dimensions are approximately 57′ x 72′. Building name: Sullivan Summer House. Designer/Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright. Date of construction: 1890. Location: Ocean Springs, Mississippi. Number of sheets: 4 sheets measuring 18″ x 24″. Floor Plan, 3/16″=1′-0″. Elevations, 3/16″=1′-0″. Section, 3/4″=1′-0″. The prints you are purchasing are crisp, high resolution black line copies on white bond paper. The original drawings were beautifully delineated by the Historic American Building Survey. Please view my other plans for more designs by Frank Lloyd Wright and other 20th century architects. Visit my website Historic Home Plans. For more information on America’s architectural heritage. Here is a link to the page on Frank Lloyd Wright home plans. IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO BUILD: These plans are NOT complete architectural drawings as might be required by your local permitting agency and do not contain all the structural, waterproofing and other details and information necessary for construction. But your local builder or architect should be able to adapt these drawings and add to them as necessary. What they do provide is accurate design information about a REAL Modernist home, not a pseudo-Modern tract house as you will find in the house plan magazines on your supermarket shelf. The item “Frank Lloyd Wright single story home design Sullivan Summer House huge porch” is in sale since Saturday, February 01, 2014. This item is in the category “Home & Garden\Home Improvement\Building & Hardware\Building Plans & Blueprints”. The seller is “antoniob1965″ and is located in Portland, Oregon. This item can be shipped worldwide.
- Project Type: Home
American System Built Homes (single story model). Frank Lloyd Wright, father of the Prairie School of design, was always interested in ways to reduce the cost of construction and make great architecture more affordable. With the �System Built� concept he explored the possibility of creating a kit of parts that could be assembled into a variety of different house plans. Only a few of these houses were built. This house, in Milwaukie, Wisconsin, is an excellent example. It shows the application of the kit to a single story design. The design demonstrates many of the qualities that make Frank Lloyd Wright�s homes so livable. The entry sequence involves changes in direction, steps, increasing levels of enclosure, until, finally, at the heart of the house we reach the hearth. All the spaces in this house pinwheel around the fireplace, the glowing warmth at the center of the home. Just behind it Wright raises the ceiling, bringing natural light into what would have been the darkest space in the house. This stable, warm, sunlit center of the home contrasts with the edges, where windows, pressed to the corners of the rooms, dissolve the �box� of the structure. As a work of art these prints are worth purchasing in their own right. For those of you interested in building a historically inspired house, these plans offer an excellent starting point. Essentially a single story house, it is built over a full basement. The main level includes approximately 900 square feet of conditioned space. The front porch adds another approximately 190. This design is most suitable for a flat site in which pleasant views may be had in all directions. With careful planning of terraces it could be adapted nicely to a moderately sloping site as well. This house would be comfortable in a suburb or country setting. Including porches, the main house has outside dimensions of approximately 32′x40′. Building name: American System Built Homes (single story). Designer/Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright. Date of construction: 1926. Style: Frank Lloyd Wright Style Home. Number of sheets: 4 sheets measuring 24″ x 36″. Cover Sheet, Information, Perspective, Site Plan. Basement Plan, First Floor Plan, Section, 1/4″=1′-0″, 3/4″=1′-0″. 4 Elevations, 1/4″=1′-0″. Building Section, Fireplace & Window Details, various scales. The prints you are purchasing are crisp, high resolution black line copies on white bond paper. The original drawings were beautifully delineated in 1998, by the Historic American Building Survey. Please view my other plans for more Frank Lloyd Wright home plans and for a large variety of house plans in many other styles as well. Also please visit my website, Historic Home Plans. Which contains further information about this plan and many others in my collection. Here is the page of Frank Lloyd Wright home plans. IF YOU ARE PLANNING TO BUILD: These plans are NOT complete architectural drawings as might be required by your local permitting agency and do not contain all the structural, waterproofing and other details and information necessary for construction. But your local builder or architect should be able to adapt these drawings and add to them as necessary. What they do provide is accurate design information about a REAL Frank Lloyd Wright home, not a pseudo-Wright tract house as you will find in the house plan magazines on your supermarket shelf. The item “Small single story, 2 bedroom home design by Frank Lloyd Wright, Prairie School” is in sale since Tuesday, December 31, 2013. This item is in the category “Home & Garden\Home Improvement\Building & Hardware\Building Plans & Blueprints”. The seller is “antoniob1965″ and is located in Portland, Oregon. This item can be shipped worldwide.
- Project Type: Home