
Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio
Oak Park, Illinois
Where Wright lived and worked during the formative Prairie years.
The Collection
A curated guide to Frank Lloyd Wright's most significant works — spanning seven decades, six architectural styles, and the breadth of America.

Oak Park, Illinois
Where Wright lived and worked during the formative Prairie years.

Oak Park, Illinois
One of the first public buildings in poured concrete — still an active congregation.

Oak Park, Illinois
A bold early Prairie house with a Roman brick base and sweeping horizontal bands.

Oak Park, Illinois
A transitional Prairie house — brother of Darwin Martin, who commissioned the Buffalo masterpiece.

Oak Park, Illinois
One of the last Prairie houses Wright designed before his extended stay in Japan.

Oak Park, Illinois
Wright's only Tudor Revival — rebuilt after a fire in a more Prairie spirit.

Oak Park, Illinois
The first fully realized Prairie house — a pivotal moment in architectural history.

Oak Park, Illinois
A three-story Prairie house — unusually vertical for Wright's typically horizontal style.

Chicago, Illinois
The pinnacle of Prairie Style — sweeping horizontal lines and cantilevered roofs.

Chicago, Illinois
An early masterwork designed while Wright was still at Adler & Sullivan.

Chicago, Illinois
An early Chicago house with a distinctive frieze of sculpted figures by Richard Bock.

Chicago, Illinois
A late Prairie house in Chicago — now a vacation rental open to overnight guests.

River Forest, Illinois
Wright's first independent commission — the house that launched a career.

River Forest, Illinois
A cruciform Prairie house designed for Wright's own bookkeeper.

River Forest, Illinois
A late Prairie house in River Forest with characteristic horizontal banding.

Riverside, Illinois
Wright's own favorite Prairie house — a sprawling complex of house, playhouse, and gardens.

Riverside, Illinois
Wright's most joyful work — art-glass windows of balloons and confetti for the Coonley kindergarten.

Riverside, Illinois
A direct prototype for the Robie House — same plan, earlier execution.

Springfield, Illinois
The most complete Prairie house — 35 art-glass windows and original furnishings intact.

Peoria, Illinois
A major Prairie house demolished in 1972 — its living room now lives at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Highland Park, Illinois
The first fully mature Prairie house — the cruciform plan perfected.

Kankakee, Illinois
One of Wright's earliest Prairie houses — now a restaurant open to the public.

Kankakee, Illinois
The companion Prairie house to the Bradley House — both designed by Wright in 1900 on the same Kankakee street.

Decatur, Illinois
Three Prairie houses for the Mueller family — a remarkable concentration in one city.

Elmhurst, Illinois
An early Prairie house in Elmhurst with characteristic horizontal banding.

Peoria, Illinois
An early Prairie house — Wright later designed a second, larger Little House in Minnesota.

Hinsdale, Illinois
An early Prairie house in Hinsdale — one of Wright's first suburban commissions.
Rockford, Illinois
Wright's only house designed for a person with a physical disability — a Usonian in Rockford open for tours.

Spring Green, Wisconsin
Wright's beloved home and studio on the Wisconsin hillside.

Racine, Wisconsin
A workplace transformed — the Great Workroom with its iconic lily-pad columns.

Wind Point, Wisconsin
The last and largest of Wright's Prairie houses — a pinwheel plan around a great central hall.

Madison, Wisconsin
The "Airplane House" — a Prairie house with a cruciform plan that reads like wings from above.

Mill Run, Pennsylvania
Wright's masterpiece — a house built over a waterfall.

Chalk Hill, Pennsylvania
A Usonian gem nestled in the Laurel Highlands near Fallingwater.

Elkins Park, Pennsylvania
A translucent mountain of light — Wright's only synagogue.
New York City, New York
A revolutionary spiral form that redefined what a museum could be.
Buffalo, New York
The most ambitious Prairie house ever built — six interconnected structures on a single Buffalo lot.
Buffalo, New York
The first structure built in the Martin complex — a Prairie house for Darwin Martin's sister.
Buffalo, New York
A Prairie house for a Larkin Company attorney — part of Buffalo's remarkable Wright cluster.

Buffalo, New York
Wright's only surviving boat house — a Prairie gem on the Buffalo waterfront, photographed by Rick McNees.
Derby, New York
The Darwin Martin summer estate — a Prairie complex perched on the Lake Erie bluffs.

Rochester, New York
A mature Prairie house in Rochester — one of Wright's finest New York works, photographed by Rick McNees.

Scottsdale, Arizona
Wright's winter home and studio in the Sonoran Desert.

Phoenix, Arizona
Wright's last residential design — completed posthumously in Phoenix.

Los Angeles, California
A Mayan-inspired masterpiece in the hills of Hollywood.
San Rafael, California
Wright's only government building — a sweeping arc of arches and blue spires.

Los Angeles, California
The grandest of the textile block houses — a Mayan temple on a Hollywood hillside.

Pasadena, California
The first textile block house — Wright's experiment in "knitting" concrete.

Bartlesville, Oklahoma
The only skyscraper Wright ever built — "the tree that escaped the crowded forest."
Grand Rapids, Michigan
A meticulously restored Prairie house — every detail original or faithfully reproduced. Free admission.
Grand Rapids, Michigan
A Prairie house in Grand Rapids — completed by Marion Mahony after Wright left for Europe.
Kalamazoo, Michigan
A Usonian on Taliesin Drive in Kalamazoo — one of three Wright houses on the same street.
Kalamazoo, Michigan
A Usonian on Kalamazoo's Taliesin Drive — one of three Wright houses on the same street.

St. Joseph, Michigan
One of Wright's last completed houses — a 1959 Usonian in St. Joseph on Lake Michigan.

Alexandria, Virginia
A Usonian house saved from demolition twice — now open at Woodlawn, Alexandria.
Yemassee, South Carolina
Wright's only plantation complex — a hexagonal Usonian estate in the South Carolina lowcountry.

Lakeland, Florida
The largest single-site collection of Wright buildings in the world.

Tampa, Florida
A Usonian house in Tampa — one of Wright's Florida commissions.
Mason City, Iowa
The only surviving Wright-designed hotel in the world — restored and operating in Mason City.
Mason City, Iowa
An early Prairie house in Mason City — restored and open for tours in the heart of Wright's Iowa cluster.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
A Usonian masterpiece on the Cedar River — now owned by the State of Iowa and open for tours.
Wichita, Kansas
The last Prairie house — Wright's most refined farewell to his first great style.

Minneapolis, Minnesota
The prototype for the Usonian house — the first of its kind.

Minneapolis, Minnesota
A late Usonian house in Minneapolis — one of two Wright houses in the city.

Springfield, Ohio
The only Prairie house Wright designed in Ohio — meticulously restored and open for tours in Springfield.
Ogden Dunes, Indiana
A Usonian house on the Indiana dunes — a rare Wright work in the Midwest dune country.
West Lafayette, Indiana
Wright's only building in West Lafayette — a Usonian Automatic open for tours near Purdue University.
Florence, Alabama
The only Frank Lloyd Wright building in Alabama — a Usonian masterpiece open for tours.

Kirkwood, Missouri
Wright's only building in Missouri — a late Usonian in Kirkwood, now open as Ebsworth Park.
Plan Your Visit
Many of Wright's greatest buildings are open to the public. Use our travel map to plan your architectural pilgrimage.
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