Frank Lloyd Wright’s Pittsburgh
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania <= and eventually, Hawaii
Opening on Saturday, April 13, 2024
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania presents both realized and unrealized projects Frank Lloyd Wright designed for the region from the 1930’s through the 1950’s.
The exhibition examines how his vision of the future might have impacted urban, suburban, and rural landscapes.
If Frank Lloyd Wright had his way, much of America would look vastly different today.?
Though the architect designed over 1,000 structures throughout his lifetime, only about half of them were built, and many of his most ambitious projects were left on the drawing board.?
Now, a new exhibit at the National Building Museum in Washington, DC, invites visitors to explore an almost-reality by focusing on one American city,?Pittsburgh,?where Wright envisioned some of his grandest work that never came to pass...
National Building Museum
401 F Street NW
Washington, DC 20001
Explore Frank Lloyd Wright’s Unrealized Vision For an Iconic American City Like Never Before (msn.com )
Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania | National Building Museum (nbm.org )???
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FYI: Pittsburgh's Northside Allegheny River hugging Park was designed by Fredrick?Law Olmstead - the same guy who created Central Park in NYC = it was finally built about 100 years after the design was created.
The idea of riverfront parks for downtown Pittsburgh dates back to 1911 and a plan prepared by the?Olmsted Brothers.
Marilyn Monroe’s house of dreams
American architect Frank Lloyd Wright (8 June 1867- 9 April 1959) is one of the most important and productive architects of the 20th century. Many of his structures were planned but never built. Fortunately, the huge amount of drawings that Wright left show what some of these unbuilt projects may have looked like and prove once more his great imagination...
Wright’s drawings for Arthur Miller and Marilyn Monroe caught our attention. They are surrounded by many rumours and thus contribute even more to the halo of mystery around the movie star and her private life. In 1957, Marilyn Monroe visited Frank Lloyd Wright in his apartment at the Plaza Hotel in New York and asked him to design a new house in Roxbury, Connecticut. She had great visions for it and didn’t care about cost — her dream house had to be something special and unique. Wright was fascinated by Marilyn and started the project as soon as she left. Based on an unbuilt design for a Texan couple he adapted the sketches to create Marilyn‘s dream house...
At the time Wright‘s concept was too imposing and expensive — he hadn’t considered the client‘s needs, and so they rejected it and decided to keep their old house. Later the design was combined with others and adapted to realise the Waikapu Country Club in Hawaii, completed in 1993.