Thursday, July 3, 2025

Day 4694: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Unrealized Buildings & TBT 2005.

''Most":junk collage, digital photo.

    





  


Want music?



    Click:  Billy Preston, My Sweet Lord.

 

2GN2S - because we love Architecture!

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Unrealized Buildings

David Romero’s Digital Models


Morris House. All images courtesy of David Romero


Among the world’s most influential architects, Frank Lloyd Wright is undoubtedly a titan of the discipline. His designs are instantly recognizable for his unique treatment of space, light, materials, and line, and he’s even responsible for entire architectural movements. The Prairie style, for example, took inspiration from the broad landscapes of the American Midwest. He also coined the term “organic architecture” to describe how experiencing a built environment should manifest as “a ‘thinking’ as well as a ‘feeling’ process.”

Hunftingdon Hardford

The Prairie style was considered the first uniquely American architectural style, later evolving into a philosophy Wright called Usonia that privileged locally available materials, practicality, connection to nature, and a strong visual continuity between the interior and exterior. The iconic Fallingwaterin Pennsylvania, for example, is a bit of a hybrid of Prairie and Usonian styles. Later, he incorporated motifs from a variety of sources, like Mayan stone carvings and “textile block” elements. His oeuvre ranges from small-scale, single-story dwellings to gleaming, futuristic complexes.


The Illinois

For architect and 3D designer David Romero, Wright’s work has been a source of inspiration since his earliest explorations within the field. “From the very beginning, I was drawn to his ability to bridge two seemingly opposite worlds: the rational and intellectual side of architecture, and the emotional—almost spiritual—experience of space,” Romero tells Colossal. “To me, that union is the essence of what makes architecture truly powerful—and no one embodies it quite like Wright.”


Detail of The Illinois

Romero’s ongoing project called Hooked on the Past explores architecture of bygone eras that nevertheless richly influences our built environment today. The Madrid-based designer has created nearly two dozen digital renderings of Wright’s unrealized concepts, from astonishing cliffside homes to an insurance company headquarters to a bank with an apparently too-ahead-of-its-time drive-thru. Wright conceived of one of his most monumental and awe-inspiring concepts for Chicago: a mile-high skyscraper titled “The Illinois” that initially included 528 stories—later edited to 365—and would have been four times the height of the Empire State Building. The architect shared the idea in his 1957 book, The Testament, asserting that it was technically possible, even with the technology available at that time, to construct a building of that scope and scale.


Gordon Strong Automobile Objective


Hooked on the Past emerged from the intersection of two personal passions: the history of architecture and the fascinating world of computer-generated imagery,” Romero says. He continues: 

These two fields, though seemingly different, complement each other in powerful ways. On one hand, I’ve always been drawn to the stories, styles, and cultural contexts behind architectural works. On the other, I’ve been deeply interested in the creative and technical potential of digital tools to visualize ideas and environments.

 

Trinity Chape

“(Wright’s) work speaks not just to the mind, through its structural ingenuity and innovative use of materials, but also to the heart,” Romero says. “There’s a poetic quality in his designs—a deep sensitivity to nature, light, and human experience—that continues to move me, no matter how many times I return to his buildings or drawings.”


Smith House

Romero collaborates regularly with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, which promotes and preserves the architect’s work and legacy. Romero’s digital recreations have been published annually in the organization’s quarterly magazine, which allows him to explore a wide range of unrealized projects.


Lea House

“Each year, together with the Foundation’s editorial team, we choose a central theme that serves as a unifying thread for the visualizations featured in that special issue,” he says. “In previous years, we’ve focused on a variety of building types and periods of his career, but this year’s theme is especially intriguing to me: temples.”


National Life Insurance

Pauson House
 

 
Smith House

Morris House


Architect and 3D designer, David Romero’s website.




Demura Sensei and some of his Costa Mesa Dojo

after Kangieko, January 2, 2005

me, Jordan Lawson, Debbie Benlien, Cheyenne Lopez, Tess Bernstein, Steven Van Wormer, Shayla Van Wormer, Demura Sensei, Michael Keating, Rachel Maher, Jake Spielberger, Jared Stanton, Luis Perez.



 


  
 
A 12 minute video, Mom,  here
 



  
 
Just because ...

Verreaux's Parrotbill



 

Thursday's Smiles ... 






   












  
  

  

2 comments:

elenor said...

Jacki, first of I want to thank you for replying to my comments. You always find such kind and lovely words. They really lift me up. I'm so thankful for your blog and your dear friendship across the ocean.
My brother is an architect and my husband wanted to be one for a long time, that's why I was very excited about your article about Frank Lloyd Wright.
Jacki, I always was totally in awe that you "survived" the beach training in January with Demura Sensei.
And then I had to smile about your "funnies". Jacki, thank you!

jacki long said...

Thank you, Elenor. I am always amazed by the talents of so many, and in so many different ways. I lone sharing them with you. Please take good care.