Interview With 100 Year Old Man Who Is the Last Original Owner of a Frank Lloyd Wright House

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Interview With 100 Year Old Man Who Is the Last Original Owner of a Frank Lloyd Wright House
The Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) would censor the internet and would make government officials the arbiters of what young people can see on
KOSA is going around again, and so we have to tell our reps to to say no again.
I saw the following script on bluesky:
courtesy of jamie quinn (from this post)
More details about the current iteration of KOSA here
AD travels to Pleasantville, New York, to tour Toy Hill House, one of the architectural gems in Frank Lloyd Wright’s visionary Usonia neighborhood. In the 1940s, a group of New York City architects, guided by Wright himself, set out to build a modern, affordable utopia—a community rooted in design, nature, and innovation. This resulted in a stunning group of mid-century modern homes nestled in the woods, just an hour from Manhattan.
Lurie House, Kaneji Domoto (as part of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonia), 1950
THE LIFE AND WORK OF KANEJI DOMOTO (2019)
This lecture introduces us to the only Japanese American architect within FLW’s Usonian community. Domoto, who grew up in a family of landscapers, was imprisoned in an internment camp during WWII, where he worked on the construction and gardening crews. He later worked as a draftsman and architect, and Wright chose him to build five houses within the planned community of Usonia. There’s an interesting article here by architect Lynnette Widder, who now owns Lurie House, about her sustainable restoration of the property. Photo via hyperallergic.com
$740,414/2 br/2420 sq ft
Briarcliff Manor, NY
Usonia house!
Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank-Lloyd-Wright-themed illustrations.
“every ‘some college’ musical trend of the 2010s, but, like, at once”... powerous gimmick