It's giving me a real appreciation for FLW's work on this house. I need to walk around and look at some other houses and see how they handle the relationship of the structure to its environment; I suspect that a big part of the reason that so many suburban houses look, well, so suburban is that they have no clear relationship to it at all, and look rather like they got dropped on an otherwise empty lawn by aliens.
Organic architecture
It's giving me a real appreciation for FLW's work on this house. I need to walk around and look at some other houses and see how they handle the relationship of the structure to its environment; I suspect that a big part of the reason that so many suburban houses look, well, so suburban is that they have no clear relationship to it at all, and look rather like they got dropped on an otherwise empty lawn by aliens.

July 5 2010, 22:12:34 UTC 5 years ago
July 5 2010, 23:00:13 UTC 5 years ago
I do think that his ideas about form were excellent, and are worth thinking about and integrating into future designs; but I also want the damned building to stay up.
July 6 2010, 01:07:04 UTC 5 years ago
July 6 2010, 00:54:57 UTC 5 years ago
Other factors are that suburban buildings are so rarely in scale with the landscape, or made of materials that belong to the place. Much but not all modernist architecture has that second disease, which is why it too rarely looks like it was meant to be there.
At least, in my experience.
July 6 2010, 14:07:56 UTC 5 years ago
I'd also recommend some of the more readable permaculture books for a slightly different take on the same issues - Gaia's Garden by Toby Hemenway is a really good one to start with.
Both those focus more on functional integration than aesthetic, but (IMHO) the two concepts are closely related.
July 6 2010, 17:30:19 UTC 5 years ago
July 13 2010, 06:37:55 UTC 5 years ago