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  1. Built in 1913 and designed by John Lloyd Wright, the 19-year-old son of Frank Lloyd Wright. This was young Wright’s first house project and was based on his famous father’s Ladies Home Journal house of 1906. The house was also contractor W.W. Bekler’s first project and was complete at a cost of $3,200 plus a ten percent architecture fee.

  2. Before being fired by his father, in 1918, John was designing his line of wooden toys for Chicago's Marshall Field & Co. including the patented Lincoln Logs (working as John Lloyd Wright, Inc.). According to biographers, Sally Kitt Chappell and Ann Van Zanten, “In the early 1950s, [John Lloyd Wright]… renewed his activities as a toy designer, now concentrating on construction block sets ...

  3. 28. Nov. 2019 · Frank Lloyd Wright-Gebäude sind immer noch von Küste zu Küste in den Vereinigten Staaten zu sehen.Vom spiralförmigen Guggenheim Museum in New York City bis zum weitläufigen Marin County Civic Center in Kalifornien ist Wright-Architektur ausgestellt, und diese Liste der von Wright entworfenen Gebäude wird Ihnen helfen, zu finden, wo Sie suchen müssen.

  4. John Lloyd Wright became estranged from his father in 1909 and subsequently left his home to join his brother on the West Coast. After unsuccessfully working a series of jobs, he decided to take up the profession of his father in 1912. Shortly afterward, he was able to reconnect with his father, who took John under his wing. Differences in opinion regarding the Imperial Hotel, Tokyo caused the ...

  5. Yes, it was John Lloyd Wright—son of Frank Lloyd Wright—who invented everyone’s second or third favorite stackable construction game, Lincoln Logs. We’re actually fresh off the 100th anniversary of that moment in 1916 when a 24 year-old John Wright—during one of his many estrangements from his dad—decided to pursue an idea that had ...

  6. John Lloyd Wright first experimented with the notion of standardization in planning his toy construction block sets. Limited in the range of elements they comprised, they lent themselves easily to mass production from the drawings that Wright prepared. But by the 1930s Wright also sought to adapt varying degrees of standardization to architectural design. For example, his Arcade Cabins Hotel ...

  7. 28. Jan. 1992 · John Lloyd Wright characterizes his father as “a rebel, a jolt to civilization, whose romantic theme — purposive planning and organic unity in inventing and combining forms — is an epoch in the architecture of the world.” His unique view of the “epoch” will intrigue architects, students, and all who admire the work of this visionary and uncompromising spirit. An added attraction of ...

    • John Lloyd Wright