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frank lloyd wright’s hollyhock house, 1921
(aline barnsdall residence)
living room + fireplace
4800 hollywood boulevard
photos by marvin rand, 1965
via: decaying hollywood mansions
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#ARCHITECTURE #ARQUITECTURA #ARQUITETURA
Sao Paulo, Brazil | V4 HOUSE | MARCIO KOGAN
SOURCE | 27.05.2013 | 23.39
http://www.blessthisstuff.com/stuff/living/living-space/v4-house-by-marcio-kogan/
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VISIT »> BOOKSTORE «< BUY
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“Wright’s design of 1923 responded to the expansive qualities of the Doheny site, respected local vegetation, and accommodated the automobile in both spatial and architectural terms. It was nothing less than an idealized prototype for what American suburbs might have become, but did not. As surviving perspectives demonstrate, buildings, roadways, and plantings are conceived as an integrated totality; it is the vision of the suburb as one structure.
Roadways depicted as powerful visual elements appear to terrace the hills, providing a unifying pattern. Developed in the manner of viaducts, they bridge intermediate ravines on gracefully arcuated spans or massively embank the steep terrain. Walls defining these roadways extend to become walls of the houses themselves.
Numerous roof terraces broaden the horizontal planes of the connecting roads, amplifying an architectural image of vast scale. Both roads and houses are clustered in ways that structure the site by selectively shaping and retaining the natural slopes. The more fragile segments of valleys and the steepest slopes are left largely untouched, but are joined in the full composition to achieve an effect of extraordinary unity.”
-LOC
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“Intended as a neighborhood kindergarten, The Little Dipper was partly built on its Olive Hill site before Aline Barnsdall, impatient with cost overruns, halted construction. Of interest as it relates to the Doheny Ranch project, the drawing demonstrates a clear advance in angular planning. Diagonal segments of the plan are smoothly integrated into bridging elements that link terraces and pools into a single, persuasive composition.
Office of Frank Lloyd Wright Graphite and colored pencil on tracing paper, ca. 1923
The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, Scottsdale, Arizona (24)”
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My favorite image from the ApluD exhibit “Los Angeles, Neverbuilt”
Frank Lloyd Wright’s proposal for Doheny Estates.
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Plan of a restored version of the Thermae of Titus, Rome
