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frank lloyd wright
a few years ago, a friend gave me an old blueprint from a job that her father worked on in the 50's. It was for a building at florida southern college and was designed by frank lloyd wright, so the blueprint was extra special. at the time I had never heard of florida southern but I knew I had to visit one day, to see the buildings in person.
a few weeks ago we were passing near lakeland, florida and we stopped to visit the school, which comprises the largest collection of wright-designed buildings in the country. we self-guided around and were able to go in most of the buildings. my children especially liked the glasswork in the chapels and the formed patterns in the concrete...
wright's architecture always makes me aware of the space as I move through it, and I consciously, and sometimes unconsciously, think about the interrelation between what is inside his spaces and what lay outside. if you find yourself near this campus, and are interested in wright, make a point to stop & explore.
words and photographs by rinne allen
i love visiting florence, alabama.
while i often go there to work (with my friends at alabama chanin), there is so much to explore. i had been to this frank lloyd wright house in florence many years ago, and was happy to visit again this weekend when i was with friends in florence.
the house was built by the rosenbaum family in the late 1930's and was the second 'usonian' house that wright designed. it is the only home in alabama that he designed, and one of just a handful in the south.
walking through a wright house is such a sensory experience; whether you like his architecture or not, his spaces give off a certain feeling that i really like because you are constantly aware of what is outside the house, or, at least i am. the proportions of his spaces are small and the ceilings are low, which forces your eyes toward the windows and the outdoors.
if you are ever near florence, this house is worth a stop because experiencing a wright house is such a rare thing in the south.
photographs and words by rinne allen