Allen-Lambe House
Prairie StyleOpen to Public

Allen-Lambe House

Wichita, KansasCompleted 1917

About This Building

The last Prairie house — Wright's most refined farewell to his first great style.

The Allen-Lambe House at 255 North Roosevelt in Wichita is widely considered the last of Wright's Prairie houses — completed in 1917 for Kansas governor Henry J. Allen and his wife Elsie. By this point Wright had refined every element of the Prairie vocabulary to its most resolved expression: the long horizontal lines, the deeply overhanging hipped roof, the integration of interior and exterior through art-glass windows and a reflecting pool, and the warm natural materials throughout. The house was later owned by Wichita businessman Lester Lambe, whose family donated it to the Allen-Lambe House Foundation. It has been meticulously restored and is now open for guided tours, making it one of the most accessible and best-preserved Prairie houses in the country.

Key Features

Last of Wright's Prairie houses

Built for Kansas Governor Henry J. Allen

Reflecting pool and original art glass

Meticulously restored — National Historic Landmark

Allen-Lambe House detail

Allen-Lambe House, 1917

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