When I shared about our tour of Fallingwater recently, I promised another set of photos coming soon because we also visited Polymath Park on that trip. Polymath Park is about a half hour from Fallingwater, and about an hour from Pittsburgh, in Pennsylvania's Laurel Highlands.
There were two homes originally on this site, both designed by a Frank Lloyd Wright apprentice and colleague named Peter Berndtson. These properties were eventually purchased by the Papinchak family with the intent of preserving the homes and eventually opening them to the public. In 2006 they purchased and relocated a Frank Lloyd Wright designed home, the Duncan House, which had originally been in Lisle, IL. And in 2019, the Wright-designed "Mäntylä" house was acquired and relocated from Cloquet. MN.
This is the Treetops Restaurant at the 'headquarters' of the site, which was originally the home of the Papinchaks:
Guests can tour all four houses or just the Wright houses. On our visit, we chose to visit just the two Wright houses.
The Duncan House was one of the prefabricated houses designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright was interested in mass production of housing throughout his career, and in the 1950s he worked with builder Marshall Erdman was already offering prefab houses. Wright offered to design better homes for Erdman that would sell at even more modest prices. The Duncan House is an example of the Prefab #1 design - a single story, L-shaped home with a bedroom wing and a living and kitchen area wing all centered on a large fireplace. The design also included a storage shed connected to the house by a carport.
The R.W. Lindholm house, named Mäntylä, was designed in 1952 by Wright. The name is from a Finnish word meaning "of the pines" which was appropriate for its original location in the Minnesota forest. The house was in danger of demolition due to encroaching development, and in 2016 the house and furnishings were donated and the relocation project began. Mäntylä at Polymath Park opened for tours in 2019.
For more about Frank Lloyd Wright, visit the original post at Homeschool Coffee Break, and the most recent post, A Fallingwater PhotoJournal. You can also check out some previous posts about Frank Lloyd Wright: A Kentuck Knob PhotoJournal; Frank Lloyd Wright - Blogging Through The Alphabet; A National Building Museum PhotoJournal
Thanks for joining me as I looked back on this tour, and I hope you enjoyed it! Have you visited any Frank Lloyd Wright buildings? Leave a comment and let me know!
This post is adapted from the original on Homeschool Coffee Break.
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I love 1950s house plans - and Wright's open views speak to my heart - a house cannot have too many windows - and I have always admired his use of them - and the wide open space in the living room. Frank Lloyd Wright built the Kaden Tower in Louisville, Ky - which every Friday we drove by during the summer when we went to the grocery store with my grandmother and aunt. We always called it, "The Birthday Cake" because it was all pink and lacey like a cake - not at all like the houses he built at all.
ReplyDeleteYes, the windows and his stated goal of making houses part of the landscape they're in are one of the things I love most about his designs. I will have to make sure I at least drive by the Kaden Tower next time I'm in Louisville. Thanks for stopping by and commenting!
DeleteI just looked it up and it's been renamed Wright Tower, but was actually designed by one of Wright's apprentices from Taliesin. A really interesting building though and I'm still planning to drive by and take a look!
DeleteThose are both lovely homes! I particularly like that spacious wide open feel of the living room in the second house.
ReplyDeleteThat living room might be my favorite Wright house living room! So open and a full wall of windows. It's hard to see in my photos but it opens onto a patio and pool (I think it was a pool - the tour didn't take us onto that patio at all). Thanks for stopping by and commenting!
DeleteWhat a neat place to tour! The homes are beautiful and you captured some great photos.
ReplyDeleteIt's a really great tour and if we're able to go back sometime, I'd love to see the apprentice houses there as well. Thanks for stopping by and commenting!
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