Frank Lloyd Wright - Robie House
Frank Lloyd Wright - Robie House
in Oak Park, IL - USA (1910)
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Designed and built between 1908-1910, the Robie House for client
Frederick C. Robie and his family was one of Wright's earlier
projects. Influenced by the flat, expanisve prairie landscape of the
American Midwest where he grew up, Wright's work redefined American
housing with the Prairie style home. According to Wright, “The prairie
has a beauty of its own and we should recognize and accentuate this
natural beauty, its quiet level. Hence, gently sloping roofs, low
proportions, quiet sky lines, supressed heavy-set chimneys and
sheltering overhangs, low terraces and out-reaching walls sequestering
private gardens."More on the Robie House after the break.
The Robie House creates a clever arrangement of public and private
spaces, slowly distancing itself from the street in a series of
horizontal planes. By creating overlaps of the planes with this
gesture, it allowed for interior space expanded towards the outdoors
while still giving the space a level of enclosure. This play on
private spaces was requested by the client, where he insisted on the
idea of "seeing his neighbors without being seen." Wright
specifically approached this request with an enormous cantilever over
the porch facing west that stretched outwards 10' feet from its
nearest structural member and 21' from the closest masonry pier.
As is seen in many of Wright’s project, the entrance of the house is
not clearly distinguishable at first glance due to the fact that
Wright believed the procession towards the house should involve a
journey. Wright also expressed the importance of the hearth in a home
with a fireplace that separated the living and dining room that is
open to the ceiling above the mantelpiece for the billiard room and
playroom. The program of the house includes a living room, a dining
room, a kitchen, a billiards room, four bedrooms, and a servant's wing
which are defined while still flowing into one another.
The rooms were determined through a modular grid system which was
given order with the 4' window mullions. Wright, however, did not use
the standard window in his design, but instead used "light
screens" which were composed of pieces of clear and colored
glass, usually with representations of nature. The purpose for these
windows was to allow light into the house while still giving a sense
of privacy. Wright also stated about the light screens, "Now the
outside may come inside, and the inside may, and does, go
outside." There are 174 art glass windows in the Robie House made
of polished plate glass, cathedral glass, and copper-plated zinc
cames, which are metal joints that hold the glass in place. The
protrusions of these windows on the East and West facade, along with
low ceilings, emphasized the long axis of the house and directed views
towards the outside. These windows were also stretched on French doors
along the entire south wall on the main level, opening up to a
balcony. The sun angles were calculated so perfectly with this
cantilever that a midsummer noon’s sun hits just the bottom of the
entire facade while still allowing light to flood in to warm the house
during the spring and autumn months.
The entire house is sheathed in Roman brick with yellow mortar, and
only the overhangs and the floating brick balcony have steel beams for
structural support. Using the horizontality of the brick, Wright added
the finishing touches to the Robie House to create the ideal modern
Prairie style home where he was able to build with the principles he
believed in. The sweeping horizontal lines, extensive overhangs, warm
well-lit interiors with furniture designed by Wright himself, and the
balance of public and private spaces made the Robie House, in the
words of Frederick C. Robie, "…the most ideal place in the
world."
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