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Must-Know Modern Homes: Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

Celebrate legendary Frank Lloyd Wright masterpiece with an enchanted evening

Bud Dietrich, AIA
Bud Dietrich, AIA9 September 2011
Houzz Contributor. My name is Bud Dietrich and I am an architect located in the Tampa Bay area of Florida. I am licensed to practice architecture in Illinois, Florida, New Jersey & Wisconsin. Since 1996 I have worked from my home office and provide full architectural services exclusively to the single family residential market. My passion is to transform my clients' houses into their homes. I strive to have the "new" home accommodate my clients' lives without fighting them at every junction. I look to add curb appeal to encourage a beautiful streetscape. And I design any addition to look and feel like it has always been there. Our projects have won numerous design awards as well as having been featured on television (CBS News Sunday Morning, HGTV, CLTV, etc.), in magazines (Better Homes & Gardens, Trends, Womans Day, etc.) and in books (Taunton Press). So don't hesitate to contact me if you're looking to transform your house into your home.
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There have been many times over the years that we’ve visited Fallingwater, a house located in the hills of western Pennsylvania. We’ve done the regular tour, a Sunday brunch tour and attended an evening reception there. In each occasion, Fallingwater never failed to enchant, enliven and teach.

The house was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in the early 1930s for Edgar Kaufmann, a Pittsburgh department store owner, and in 1991 it was named the “best all-time work of American architecture.” In 1963 the Kaufmann’s son, Edgar Jr., entrusted the house, land and original furnishings to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, which today continues as conservator of this remarkable building.

In celebration of the 75th anniversary of Fallingwater, the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, caretakers of Fallingwater, held “an enchanted evening” at the house on Friday, Sept. 17, 2011. (Learn more about the event here.) An evening reception at Fallingwater — with the house aglow like a lantern in the woods while the sounds of the waterfall, soft music and good conversation fill the air — would be like no other.
Fallingwater
The iconic view of the house can be had with just a short walk through the woods to an outcropping. In what can rarely be said about buildings, this house makes Mother Nature all the better for being there. It truly is the high point in Frank Lloyd Wright's quest for an "organic architecture."
Fallingwater
The house hovers over the waterfall. At once connected and rooted to its site while seemingly ready to fly free and into the sky. Mrs. Kaufmann, an avid outdoors person, would fish from the stair over the waterfall.
Fallingwater
The main living space features windows all around and a stone floor. Terraces overlooking the water are accessible from the right and left, expanding the space of the room to the outdoors. And though large, this room lives quite comfortably. This is a testament to Wright's ability to manipulate scale to get the desired effect.
Fallingwater
In true Wright fashion, built-in seating provides a relaxing place to take a nap, read a book or share the company of friends and family.
Fallingwater
The covering over the stair that leads from the main living room to the waterfall can be seen in this photo. When open, the sounds of the water rushing below fill the room. When closed, the water's sound is muted to a soft background song.
Fallingwater
The central, vertical core of the house is built of local stone and houses fireplaces at each level, although none as grand as at the main living room. This fireplace, like those great hearths in Colonial America, gives a sense of welcome and warmth to the space. The large stone at the hearth has existed in this location for thousands of years, connecting the house to its site like no other.
Fallingwater
From almost every room there is a sense of the stone core that rises from the site. Against this backdrop are places to relax and recharge. This was, after all, a weekend "vacation" home for the Kaufmann family.
Fallingwater
The attention to detail is unsurpassed, as in the matching woods of the wardrobe. A testament to the close collaboration between architect and client.
Fallingwater
What could be a better place to sit and write a letter to a dear friend while overlooking the stream below.

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