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The Richard C. Smith House is a small Usonian home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and constructed in Jefferson, Wisconsin in 1950. [2] It is one of Wright's diamond module homes, a form he used in the Patrick and Margaret Kinney House, the E. Clarke and Julia Arnold House and a number of other homes he designed in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
The Melvyn Maxwell Smith and Sara Stein Smith House, also known as MyHaven, is a Usonian home that was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and constructed in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, in 1949 and 1950. [2] The owners were two public school teachers living on a tight budget. The 1957 landscape design is by Thomas Dolliver Church.
In 2008, Wright scholar, William Allin Storrer unveiled his controversial 29 undiscovered Frank Lloyd Wright works. One of these houses was the Thomas E. Sullivan House at 336 Gregory Avenue in Wilmette, Illinois , next door to the Burleigh House at 330 Gregory Ave.
Taliesin. 5607 County Road C, Spring Green. Wright's home, studio and training center in the Driftless region is both a National Historic Landmark and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.. Several ...
Two neighboring Frank Lloyd Wright homes are for sale in Kalamazoo with a reported selling price of $4.5 million. ... 1949: Melvyn Maxwell Smith House, 5045 Pon Valley Rd., Bloomfield Hills. 1949: ...
One of four Frank Lloyd Wright homes built in the "Galesburg Country Homes" neighborhood, the Curtis and Lillian Meyer House at 11108 Hawthorne Dr. in Galesburg, outside of Kalamazoo, is known for ...
The Smith House is similar to the Harry Goodrich House through its high pitched and double sloped roof. The Goodrich House, an 1896 Wright design, may have also been one of the unbuilt homes Wright designed for Roberts. [2] The shingles stand in contrast to the style Frank Lloyd Wright was using by the time the house was built in 1898.
The house was designed in 1957 for Evelyn and Conrad Gordon, [5] and finished in 1963 (four years after Frank Lloyd Wright's death). It was originally located near Wilsonville, Oregon, situated to take advantage of views of the adjacent Willamette River on the west side and Mount Hood to the east.