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He Saved a Historic Frank Lloyd Wright. His Latest Project: Finding a Buyer for It

He Saved a Historic Frank Lloyd Wright. His Latest Project: Finding a Buyer for It

Frank Lloyd Wright had more design ideas in a day than most architects have in a lifetime. Between the end of World War II, when he was almost 80, until his death in 1959, at 92, he designed more than 100 single-family homes. Their variety is staggering, which is why true Wright aficionados can never see enough of them. Each house, dozens of which are open to the public, packs surprises.
What's more, even in his 80s, and even while trying to complete important public commissions like New York's Guggenheim Museum, Wright never took the easy way out. When J. Willis Hughes, an oil speculator from Jackson, Mississippi, asked Wright to design a house for his large family, he sent the architect photos of a relatively flat and open site. Wright asked him to find a lot with more complex, and challenging, topography. Hughes complied, buying a wooded acre that descends from Glenway Drive, in the Fondren neighborhood of Jackson, into a gully. That allowed Wright to play with level changes in the house, and to extend the bedroom wing into the landscape with a fountain that feeds a swimming pool that feeds a stream designed by Wright. The elaborate water feature is one reason the house is known as Fountainhead. The other reason is that Ayn Rand's 1943 novel of that name concerns an idealistic architect based largely on Wright.

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