The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT
known as the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. The announcement came on the iconic architect’s 150th birthday.
Nestled at the base of Camelback Mountain, the house is constructed in the form of a spiral that appears to rise from the ground and offers 360 degree views of Camelback and other mountains that loom over the city.
The house completed in 1952 is regarded as the precursor to the Guggenheim Museum in New York City, said Aaron Betsky, the school’s dean. The Guggenheim Museum is one of Wright’s most revered works. The architect designed over 1,000 architectural works, 532 which were built, and he is regarded by many as one of America’s best architects.
Betsky said the donation “will allow us to use that great legacy to be a living laboratory in which we will figure out how to use what Frank Lloyd Wright taught us about living in the desert Southwest, to make the life in this desert and in this community even better in the future.”
Rawling bought the Phoenix home in 2012 for $2.4 million to save it from being demolished by its previous owners.
He had plans to restore it and turn it into a museum, but neighbors complained doing so would generate excessive traffic.
He said he hopes the donation will engage the community and continue the school’s mission.