Wright's Fallingwater
Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater at HOUSE FOUR: The House on a Waterfall (1935-37) is an architectural work that is harmonious with its natural surroundings. Wright uses space, materials, context and structure to effect this harmony. For instance, its cantilever balconies jut out over the rocks within the waterfall in a way that makes it look as though the house were a part of the natural structure in the wild. Yet it also possesses that Frank Lloyd Wright style -- the emphasis of lines and flats in a kind of minimalist fashion that exudes simplicity of soul as well as modern sophistication, allowing the house to hold its own and have its own identity even in these woods where it is also a part of the discourse between wild and civilization.
The house is literally situated over a waterfall in the woods. The beauty of the landscape is preserved and in a Frank Lloyd Wright home, landscape and surroundings are as significant and vital as the building itself. The two should be harmonious. Thus, the trees are still standing and shoot up perpendicularly from the horizontals that jut out at uneven lengths and directions at the front of the home that overlooks the waterfall....
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