This web page is part of the All-Wright Site - Frank Lloyd Wright Building Guide, which contains geographically organized listings of Wright's works in many states. Please see this page for more information on how the Building Guide is organized.
Individual Building Listings:
Francis W. Little House "Northhome" (S.173),
Deephaven, Minnesota, 1912. Demolished and partially saved.
A. H. Bulbulian House (S.292), Rochester,
Minnesota, 1947.
Malcolm F. Willey House (S.229), Minneapolis,
Minnesota, 1934.
David Lovness House (S.391), Stillwater,
Minnesota, 1956.
Henry J. Neils house (S.314), in Minneapolis.
Thomas E. Keys House (S.321), Rochester,
Minnesota, 1950.
S. P. Elam House (S.336), Austin, Minnesota,
1950.
R. W. Lindholm House, "Mantyla" (S.353),
Cloquet, Minnesota, 1952.
James B. McBean House (S.413), Rochester,
Minnesota, 1957.
Paul Olfelt house (S.427), St. Louis Park, Minnesota, 1958.
Lindholm Service Station (S.414), Cloquet (near Duluth),
Minnesota, 1956
Fasbender Clinic (S.424), Hastings,
Minnesota, 1957
Other sites, books, links of interest (not necessarily Frank Lloyd
Wright related):
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Lloyd Wright Foundation.
This large Prairie house used to be on Lake Minnetonka near
Minneapolis. The library is now part of the collection at the
Allentown Art Museum in Pennsylvania, and the 55-foot living room
is part of the collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York City.
Rochester, a town in southwestern Minnesota, home of the Mayo Clinic, is home to three of Mr. Wright's
extant Minnesota designs. This particular one-story house is built
with one 120-degree angle, and is constructed of cement brick and
cypress.
(Further information on this home is pending)
This earth-bermed house is based on a 1938 design for Detroit
auto workers. The Gunnar Berkirts design for "Dominos Farms" in
Ann Arbor, Michigan bears some resemblance to this house, but
on a Cyclopean scale.
This two-story stone and cypress building features a design based
on triangles and rectangles. Austin, Minnesota, is known for
the George a. Hormel company.
The clients also had the gas station in Cloquet
built (Cloquet rhymes with Parkay, and the a's in "Mantyla" have
double-dots over them).
This Usonian house is the second built on the Marshall Erdman
Company's prefabricated plans.
This house was completed by Taliesin Architects after
Mr. Wright's death. It is a small house built into a hillside.
This working Phillips 66 gas station is currently open to the
public.
This has always been a commercial/professional building open to
the public as such buildings usually are. The draping of the terne
metal roof resembles an overturned boat hull. This design came
just before another (but different in appearance) medical clinic
in Montana.
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