March 2008
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March 30, 2008
Frank Lloyd Wright comes to California
Some of Frank Lloyd Wright’s most engaging and innovative architecture was done in Southern California in the years following the end of World War I. From 1919 to 1923, the architect worked part-time in the newly-sprung Los Angeles metropolis, during the midst of a tremendous economic boom fueled in part by the explosion of the personal automobile and the petroleum industry maturing in California at that time. In a span of only 4 years he created new forms of American architecture that we can still look to for inspiration. (At the same time, he was engaged to build the monumental Imperial Hotel in Japan, arguably one of his greatest achievements.)
Above: the Alice Millard House, also known as La Miniatura, 1923, in Pasadena, a short walk from The Gamble House, Charles and Henry Greene's 1908 masterwork of American Arts & Crafts architecture.
Below: detail of the Samuel Freeman House, also circa 1923, just up the hill from Hollywood Boulevard.
After building the Hollyhock House in 1921, his first project in California, Wright set out to create 4 more homes in the Los Angeles area using his new “textile block” system of cast concrete blocks. In addition to the Millard House and Freeman House shown above, he built the Storer House at the west end of Hollywood Boulevard (bought and restored in the 1980s and still in private hands), and the Ennis House, in the Hollywood Hills below the Griffith Observatory.
Wright's patterned cast concrete looks great, especially as it is shadowed by the unique light of Southern California. This construction method embodies his ideal of “organic architecture:” sand in the concrete came from the construction sites. While the concrete was beautifully handled by the genius Wright, it has proven to be highly susceptible to aging and all the buildings have required tremendous work in recent decades just to keep them standing. Even with rebar tying the blocks together, this construction technique probably wasn't the best choice for a region beset by earthquakes and torrential rains.
Below: the Storer House, Hollywood, California (private):
Below: the Ennis House, Hollywood, California. Notice that the building is clad in construction scaffolding; this was during 2007's long-needed stabilization project to secure the home on its hillside perch.
Here are some photos of the concrete blocks disintegrating at the building's foundation, and a New York Times article from 2005 about the restoration of the Ennis House.
Technorati Tags: architecture, California, EnnisHouse, FrankLloydWright, FreemanHouse, LosAngeles, MillardHouse, StorerHouse
March 30, 2008 in Architecture, City // Los Angeles | Permalink | Comments (2)
San Jose’s City Hall: California futurism
What we have here is the long-awaited “Future” as realized by architect Richard Meier in San Jose, California's new City Hall — finished in 2005, photographed here in 2008:
It's found at 200 East Santa Clara Street in San Jose, California (Google map) — the so-called “Capital of Silicon Valley.”
As always, start at Wikipedia for more info about San Jose City Hall.
Technorati Tags: architecture, California, RichardMeier, SanJose
March 30, 2008 in Architecture, California // Northern, Modernism + modernity | Permalink | Comments (5)
March 21, 2008
Happy spring // unhappy 5th anniversary of the Iraq War
Happy ** spring
And unhappy 5th anniversary of the Iraq War.
Technorati Tags: poppies, spring
March 21, 2008 in City // San Francisco | Permalink | Comments (0)
March 17, 2008
The Unforseen // featured photos of suburban sprawl
IN THEATERS NOW! “The Unforseen” opened March 14, 2008 at San Francisco's Lumiere, Berkeley's Shattuck, Los Angeles's Nuart, and will open in other cities in coming months. These are three of my photos which were used in this 2007 documentary film which examines the wasting of a natural springs in Austin, Texas due to suburban development. Links to these photos…
Check out the movie website: www.theunforeseenfilm.com
The film was beautifully shot by cinematographer Lee Daniel; directed by Laura Dunn; and was co-produced by environmentalist Robert Redford as well as one of my favorite directors, Terrence Malick (Badlands, Days of Heaven, The New World).
Technorati Tags: AntelopeValley, California, development, environment, homes, LauraDunn, OilAddiction, Palmdale, PeakOil, RobertRedford, SanRamon, suburb, suburbansprawl, TerrenceMalick, TheUnforseen, urbansprawl
March 17, 2008 in Urbanism + suburbs | Permalink | Comments (0)