A Green Addition to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Meeting House
Architects of the First Unitarian Society’s new eco-friendly addition find inspiration in the ideas of original architect Frank Lloyd Wright
- By Laura Kearney
- Smithsonian.com, May 21, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
John G. Thorpe, a restoration architect and a founder of the Frank Lloyd Wright Preservation Trust in Oak Park, Illinois, says there are few additions to Wright’s institutional or commercial buildings. He cites the Guggenheim’s addition as one example and notes that the Meeting House actually had two previous additions, in 1964 and 1990.
“We’ve always had a high degree of respect for his body of work,” says Vince Micha, project architect for Kubala Washatko. “He was pretty daring and willing to do the untested. That takes a great deal of courage and self-confidence and a bit of ego. You end up with some pretty astonishing results.”
The architects assembled a panel of Wright experts, including Thorpe, to comment on their designs. Early plans included massive chimneys and triangular spaces echoing those in Wright’s design. The alternative was to counter his sharp angles with a gentle curve.
“The arc was the purest, quietest, simplest form to use in relation to the intense geometry in the Wright building,” says Micha. The architects eventually took advantage of the south-sloping site, placing the mass of the addition below the entrance level. The top floor seems to hug the earth, as does Wright’s building.
“If you’re going to touch it and add onto it, you must respect it,” says Thorpe. “Kubala Washatko was sensitive enough to end up with a design that does that.”
Micha calls the area where the two buildings are joined together “a really tender spot.” Glass walls topped by a glass roof slid underneath the broad eave of Wright’s roof provided the solution. “It sort of created this hyphen between the two structures.”
Windows running the length of the upper-level space dominated by glass, steel, cable wire and red-stained concrete floors (a shade matching Wright’s signature Cherokee red) are accented by red pine support posts from the Menominee tribal lands, a renowned sustainable forestry project in northeastern Wisconsin. As with the limestone used in Wright’s original structure, local products were used in the addition.
Kubala Washatko and other architects practicing sustainable design today rely on local materials to avoid the negative environmental impact of transporting products over long distances. For Wright, materials indigenous to a place had value since they required no additional decoration; the ornament was within. “He wanted it laid up in the way you would find it in nature,” says Garver of Wright’s use of stone in his Meeting House.
The new windows are flush to the floor, an approach similar to the one Wright used in the loggia of his landmark building. “He runs window into stone—there’s no elaborate framing,” says Garver of Wright’s technique. “It makes ambiguous what’s inside and outside.” Bringing light into a space was critical in Wright’s theory of organic architecture, for it connected the interior with nature.
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Comments (2)
The congregation (of which I am a member as well as a member of the addition development and building committees) had used Taliesin Fellowship for its 1964 addition as well as its 1994 addition. When we decided to build our third addition, we did a national search for an architectural firm that combined both substantive experience in building onto a National Historic Landmark and similar experience in green building design. After sending out more than 25 RFPs and interviewing at least 7 firms, we chose the one we thought had the best credentials, experience and a design philosophy we were comfortable with. Kubala Washatko turned out to be in our backyard, though in an opposite direction from Taliesin. We were extremely pleased by their sensitivity to our needs and their determination to give us an addition that would please not only the vast majority of our members but the greater FLLW and historic preservation communities. We believe that what we got 21st century Usonian architecture at its best! It took some 16 design revisions, but it was worth it!
Posted by March Schweitzer on October 2,2011 | 11:50 AM
I think it very strange that the church did not consider going to the source of this building for their addition. Taliesin is about 30 miles up the road with an architectural office that still includes a number of architects that worked directly with Mr. Wright during the design and construction of this building.
When the church ran short of funds, Mr. Wright assigned nearly the entire office and many of the students of the Taliesin Fellowship to finish the building, We operated earth moving equipmdent, constructed the seating, completed the interior, painted, the women sewed curtains and seating cushions, and provided many of the tasks that were required to open the building for the opening, all at no expense to the church.
Perhaps there is no one left in the congregation that remembers all of this. There was definately an obligation on the church's part to consider the services that Taliesin could provide through their staff of talented architects that are on the cutting edge of new technologies and well versed in the new "green" architecture.
Posted by W. Kelly Oliver on June 7,2009 | 01:32 PM