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URBAN
PULSE--ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW
BIGGER Isn't Better
As Frank
Lloyd Wright knew, it's not the size that matters, but what you do
with it.
by
BRIAN LIBBY
243-2122
Editor's
note:
A few weeks ago, during his final days as communications director
for the Portland chapter of the American Institute of Architects,
Brian Libby was invited by architect Al Staehli to help photograph
the Gordon House before its disassembly and move to Silverton. Commentary
by Staehli follows.
Local architects
and history buffs cheered when Frank Lloyd Wright's Gordon House
in Charbonneau was recently spared from the bulldozers.
Given Wright's
visionary ideas about connecting structures to the surrounding landscape,
the plan to move his only Oregon building to Silverton isn't a perfect
ending to the story. But by placing the dwelling in a public place--the
Oregon Garden--there's a chance that it can serve as an important,
and timely, lesson: Bigger isn't always better.
The rich have
always measured their success in square feet and cubic inches, from
their castles and beach homes to their yachts and SUVs. It was this
same drive for a visible status symbol that almost led to the Gordon
House's demise.
Since its completion
in 1963, the Gordon House has been quietly nestled on 22 acres of
farmland along the Willamette. Following the Gordons' death a few
years ago, however, their son demanded a sky-high price for its
subdivision-ready acreage, hoping it would be included in an expanded
urban growth boundary. When that hope fizzled, and with it any development
options, he sold the property to an affluent Wilsonville couple,
Dave and Carey Smith, who were attracted not to Wright's craftsmanship
but to the acreage below it.
The demolition
request brought widespread outrage and the offer from the Frank
Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy to remove it for free. Removal
will allow the Smiths to upgrade from a 38-year-old, 2,100-square-foot
home to a brand new McMansion of more
gargantuan proportions.
The Smiths aren't
the only ones who seem to value quantity over quality. Within the
past few years, homes designed by Pietro Belluschi and John Yeon
have been bulldozed for bigger dwellings. The new structures are
the antithesis of what Wright built on the banks of Willamette.
Wright designed
a lot of big buildings in his career (his famed Robie House in Chicago
is more than four times as large as the Garden House), but this
minister's son was also faithfully committed to modest-size, middle-class
homes, which he christened "Usonian." The Gordon House is one of
them, based on Wright's "House for a Family of $5,000--$6,000 Income"
plan, originally published in a 1938 issue of Life magazine.
(That wage translates to about $65,000-$75,000 today.) Lilliputian
by today's status-home standards, it radiates beauty and craftsmanship
in a way that most cavernous West Hills homes never approach.
As the Gordon
House makes the transition from a home to a museum, it should serve
as a reminder not only to architects and builders, but also to those
hiring them:
Despite efforts
to limit lot sizes and boost density (not to mention the current
energy crunch), we continue to build banal, monstrous houses.
"Everybody says
that they want craftsmanship over size," says David Giulietti, a
leading residential architect, "but usually in the end it's a 4,000-to-5,000-square-foot
home they wind up asking for."
Still, Giulietti
hopes that attitude will change. Wright, after all, proved a home's
quality can--and should--be measured in workmanship and design,
not square footage.
Al Staehli's
Commmentary
Wright's
houses are delightful to walk into. Unlike in most McMansions (or
what I call "big-hair houses"), you don't walk into some totally
inappropriate corporate-sized lobby where you feel lost. You enter
this house through a small, constricted opening with a low ceiling
and transition into a dramatic high-ceiling area. You always have
a sense of moving through a sequence of different-scaled spaces.
Wright's Usonian houses are of a scale that you can live in. I'm
not the kind of architect who could design, say, a 600-square-foot
bathroom, so I relate to these designs.
Wright was especially
known for using wood and masonry for their color, their texture,
their warmth. A lot of the Northwest-style architects like Walter
Gordon and Pietro Belluschi did that, too. People here like to be
able to look out the window to the trees but also have a cozy feel
on the inside.
You would not
find this kind of detail in most builder-made houses today--it would
be too expensive and require more attention to detailing. But that's
exactly what some architects are now arguing for: more modest-sized
spaces but spending the money on finish and detail and materials.
"We're losing
landmarks monthly throughout the state. A little bit goes here,
a little bit there, and first thing you know you've lost the integrity
of the land. It isn't as if this was one of Wright's major buildings,
but in the context of surviving Usonian homes it's actually very
important. And it's definitely the only work of its kind in Oregon."
--Al Staehli
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