The Jacobs House was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Herbert and Katherine Jacobs and constructed in 1937. The private home is now a National Historic Landmark.
The Gilmore House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, was constructed in 1909 in what is now the University Heights Historic District just a few blocks west of Camp Randall. The house is considered a quintessential Wright design and was built for Eugene Gilmore, a law professor at UW-Madison.
The Rev. Kelly Asprooth-Jackson stands in the sanctuary of the First Unitarian Meeting House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and constructed in 1951. The Meeting House is one of the stops on a new "Wright in Madison" trail designed to show off Wright's work and tell the story of his time in Madison.
Frank Lloyd Wright was born in Richland Center but moved to Madison when he was 11 years old. While in middle school, he became friends with Robert Lamp, for whom later in life he would design a house on North Butler Street.
The 1893 prize-winning Monona Boathouse design by Frank Lloyd Wright was completed when the architect was just 26 years old. The boathouse, planned for Law Park, was never built.
The half-circle windows of Monona Terrace provide sweeping views of Lake Monona. Frank Lloyd Wright had envisioned a convention center in Madison's Downtown since the 1930s, but it wasn't built until the middle 1990s.
The Rev. Kelly Asprooth-Jackson stands in the sanctuary of the First Unitarian Meeting House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and constructed in 1951. The Meeting House is one of the stops on a new "Wright in Madison" trail designed to show off Wright's work and tell the story of his time in Madison.
Frank Lloyd Wright was born in Richland Center but moved to Madison when he was 11 years old. While in middle school, he became friends with Robert Lamp, for whom later in life he would design a house on North Butler Street.
The Gilmore House, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, was constructed in 1909 in what is now the University Heights Historic District just a few blocks west of Camp Randall. The house is considered a quintessential Wright design and was built for Eugene Gilmore, a law professor at UW-Madison.
The half-circle windows of Monona Terrace provide sweeping views of Lake Monona. Frank Lloyd Wright had envisioned a convention center in Madison's Downtown since the 1930s, but it wasn't built until the middle 1990s.
The Jacobs House was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Herbert and Katherine Jacobs and constructed in 1937. The private home is now a National Historic Landmark.
The 1893 prize-winning Monona Boathouse design by Frank Lloyd Wright was completed when the architect was just 26 years old. The boathouse, planned for Law Park, was never built.