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Frank Lloyd Wright has regarded himself as a pioneer whom people were “out of step” with. He always thought that New York City did not deserve the skyline it had at that time. He dreamed of his own America when he saw the city growing into a sprawl of incoherent buildings. His archives at the Museum of Modern Art elaborate through numerous drawings and sketches with various ideas to counteract it.
Wright had proposed different vivid colors like pink, Cherokee red and orange for painting the Guggenheim Museum in New York at the time of its construction. Interestingly, the museum that was once painted beige, was repainted white in the 90s to be in keeping with the surrounding area.
The prominent architect believed in American diversity. In 1928, he designed a school for African-American children, but the project never saw the light.
Back then in the south, schools were often U-shaped and clad with clapboard. Contrary to what was common, Wright designed several doughnut-shaped schools which he described to be “colorful” and “vivacious”. They were ornamented and had greensward, a patio, and diamond-shaped windows.
Broadacre City was a revolutionary idea Wright came up with. He imagined America as a quasi-agrarian society, with small family farms.
He introduced “Skyscraper Regulation” in 1926 that comprised nine blocks of garages, courtyards, and skywalks. The idea of mass housing came late in his life. He manifested it in an eight-foot-tall section drawing of a skyscraper. If that edifice had been built today, it would have been twice as tall as the tallest skyscraper. The mile-high building had a taproot embedded in the ground to give it the required support, and it could accommodate 100,000 people.
Since the turn of the century, Wright was concerned about the impact of cars and people on cities. He pursued ideas that included having apartments and offices around green areas and explored solutions for busy city centers and city blocks.
Creative as he was, a revolutionist who thought out of the box, his archives will always be a treasure to be rediscovered.
The post Frank Lloyd Wright Reveals His Unique Intellect in Sketches: Doughnut-shaped Schools, Skywalks, and Mile-High Skyscraper appeared first on Arch2O.com.
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