When Frank Lloyd Wright began practicing architecture at the turn of the 19th century, American suburbs were a pastiche of borrowed European architectural styles. But Wright had a vision; he wanted to create a style that was uniquely American, inspired by the landscape and free of associations with the old world. He called this unique style "Usonian", a play on "USA."
In 1936, the same year his Fallingwater landed him on the cover of Time magazine, Wright began work on a series of single-story, modestly sized residences that have come to be known as his Usonian homes. These designs reflected his desire to craft a uniquely American style, as well his interest in creating well-designed homes that the average American could afford. The clients for his earlier Prairie houses were very wealthy; in contrast, the clients for Wright's Usonian homes were distinctly middle class. In their design, Wright rejected the Victorian formality of his earlier houses; the Usonians had no formal living areas, a reflection of the more casual direction American home life was taking.
Other features common to the Usonian houses included the radiant heating systems pioneered by Wright, with pipes full of hot steam running through the foundation to heat the houses from the ground up. To save money on construction costs, the houses were laid out on a grid, which allowed for greater standardization of parts, and materials like brick, concrete, and wood were left unpainted. Many of the features of the Usonians, especially their open floor plans, connection with the outdoors, and strong horizontal lines, had a huge influence on the Ranch Houses that would soon spring up in every American suburb.
Today, many of Wright's Usonian houses are still inhabited by the families of their original owners. When they do come on the market, they tend to sell for millions of dollars. It's a far cry from Wright's original intentions of affordability, but also a testament to his design genius and the enduring beauty and simple comfort of the houses he built for the everyman.
Images:
1-4: The Washington Post
5: Wikimedia Commons
6-9: Apartment Therapy
10: NY Times
11: AIArchitect
12: Usonia 1
13: savewright.org














Sheex Bedding
Thanks for the this article. I love looking at the Usonian houses. I strongly suspect that the architect who designed our 1956 modern ranch was strongly influenced by the design of these houses. We don't have a formal living space, everything is compartmentalized, yet flows togethers. We have the exposed brick, flat roof lines and soffit lighting, as well. I wish I knew who designed our home. I need to do some real research into that and see if I can't come up with something.
I much prefer the bright, informal Usonian houses to the Prairie houses, which I find to be formal, dark and depressing.
Oh, my. This is a wonderful rush to my senses.
I live in Wisconsin, a stone's throw from where Wright was born as well as Taliesin East. (You can rent one of his cabins, the Seth Peterson cottage, on Mirror Lake, which I highly recommend.) His prairie-style home are everywhere here, and while I adore them and their homage to this area, I'm really digging the Usonians. Wow. And thank you.
There is a community north of NYC called Usonia (part of Pleasantville, NY) -- Wright laid out the property for 48 houses, and designed 3 of them. The others are designed by architects who imitated his style and sensibility. I did my senior thesis on the development. Well worth a drive-thru if you are in the area!
I featured a few of the Tarrytown Usonia homes on my blog (when they were for sale). You can check out the pictures here:
http://northernwestchesterhome.blogspot.com/search?q=usonia
The Zimmerman house is a lesser know example of FLW's. It's located in Manchester NH and is part of the Currier Museum of Art now. Check it out if you're in NH!
http://www.currier.org/collections/zimmerman.aspx
I thought Usonian was a play on U So Need to live In here, because I do. Ok that was a bad joke but I LOVE these houses. Want them. Need them.
The Pope-Leighey house is one of my favorite sites to visit in the DC area.
Another little-known gem, while not in the same style as Wright, is the Hillwood Estate, the home of Marjorie Merriweather Post.
I am very much an industrial loft person, but if I ever own a home it absolutely must be a Frank Lloyd Wright. Absolutely best American architect ever!
he was a visionary.
sara alana
I'm from Oak Park, IL, where Wright's studio and many of his Prairie style homes are, so I grew up walking by and sometimes going in those homes or their mimics. I really love these Usonians and their functionality with nature and light-- two of Wright's best design qualities, IMO. His later works seem so much more integrated with their surroundings and time.
I lived in the DC area for many years and visited the Pope/Leighy house several times. I was always struck by how small the house looked from the outside but how spacious the interior was. Who are the visionary architects today? I don't understand why it's not possible for the design of compact contemporary affordable homes that reflect today's lifestyles.
@trprowda... I agree. Too many mcmansions being built today and absolutely no smaller houses, at least in my area (DC suburbs). Condos, yes, but what about single-family houses?
Beautiful and so very Wright. Loving that Reisley house!
He was a remarkable architect, but he was also a tireless self promoter. While the Usonians are wonderful, there were many, MANY other architects who were equally talented and visionary ... they were just not nearly as noisy, colorful, or egotistical as Wright. The Usonians, though designed to be affordable, consistently overran their budgets. And FLW was constitutionally incapable of designing a roof that didn't leak.
I live in wisconsin, just a few blocks from one of this prairie style houses. it's gone from a home to a gift shop and back to a home recently. i long to go in so badly. wright was a genius.
One of the really cool things about Wright is that with a career that spanned over 70 years you can find everything from Victorian to Prairie to Modern When you compare these Usonian homes to some of his early "bootleg" houses you wouldn't believe it possible they were designed by the same architect.
I visited the Rosenbaum House in Florence, Al. this year. Thought it was great. One family owner until it was given to the city and is now a museum. Frank Loyd Wright was unmistakably a visionary and changed the architecture world. However, it was fun to learn of his stubborn wants and dislike of the homeowners input. The original kitchen was the size of a closet, the furniture was built for shorter people, and narrow doorways that furniture could not fit through.
Was amazed of how modern the design still is and the use of materials that are common today, but were new to structures in the 30's
St. Louis is home to the Kraus House, a FLW Usonian home built in the 1950s. You can visit it.....here's the website http://www.ebsworthpark.org/. The website contains the history of it's construction...which was quite contentious and exhausting. But it is a treasure to visit, and still has the original furnishings and fabrics. And the only parallelogram shaped bed I've ever seen! I'm not sure the owners ever slept in it.
To live in one of these homes is really where it comes full circle. It's more than looks, although they are stunning. The feeling that these houses have once you enter is completely calming and intriguing at the same time. Every day I find myself looking at something new in my house, although not a Wright it's surely a wright-like built by an apprentice. It's more than a box, but a living structure that really offers a mental stimulation to those who participate. Surely some would think my own house as cold, uncomfortable, and un-inviting. I see beauty, comfort, solitude, and a strong connection to whats going on outside all the wood, cement, and glass.
If you have never toured a "usonian", do yourself a favor and check one out. Chances are that you'll love it, and really realize how much of a visionary Wright was. His houses still get main-stream recognition many years later.
I grew up in Queens and used to play in an area called "The Bicycle Path". One day someone started to build a house right beside my "fort". Watching it being built -- a long, slim space in the middle of what I called "the woods" -- sparked my interest in architecture. I'm not sure it was Usonian, but it sure looks like the photos.
I grew up in Pleasantville, NY and had several friends who lived in Usonia. I used to play and sleep over at the Reisley house! It was a strange experience for me to be in those homes - I lived in a standard issue split-level development and I always felt as if I might get lost in Usonia. :-)
I had the opportunity to visit the Pope-Leighey house on a visit to DC recently and can't recommend it enough. The tour was very interesting and gave me a new appreciation for this style of architecture. Please make time to see it if you're ever in the area.
When my husband was a kid his family spent a few years in one of the non-Wright-designed homes in the Westchester County Usonia. He says he has never been so cold in his life (the house had a curved wall of floor-to-ceiling windows, and apparently inadequate heating). But the houses LOOK beautiful.
The huge windows are amazing. So light and airy.