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  1. Wright’s first commission in California was the George C. Stewart House in Montecito, which was built in 1909. This was followed by the V.C. Morris Gift Shop in San Francisco in 1912, and the Hanna House in Palo Alto in 1917. Certainly, one of his most famous work in California is Hollyhock House, which was built in Los Angeles in 1917.

    • Alex Lauer
    • Hollyhock House. Location: Los Angeles (map) What to know: The one California building included in the UNESCO World Heritage List, the Hollyhock House was built between 1919 and 1921 for oil heiress Alice Barnsdall and is now the centerpiece of Barnsdall Art Park.
    • V.C. Morris Gift Shop. Location: San Francisco (map) What to know: While the building, located just off Union Square, was a remodel of an existing structure, it was also a proof of concept for the Guggenheim Museum and includes the same iconic spiral interior.
    • Hanna House. Location: Stanford (map) What to know: A testament to Wright’s dedication to the American middle class, the Hanna House was built for Stanford professor Paul Hanna and his wife Jean.
    • Nakoma Golf Resort. Location: Clio (map) What to know: The teepee-inspired clubhouse was originally designed in 1923 for Wisconsin’s Nakoma Country Club, but it never came to fruition; that is, until the plans were purchased in the ‘90s and finished in 2001 … in California.
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    • Iconic LA: All 8 of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Los Angeles Houses
    • Hollyhock House, 1921
    • Millard House, 1923
    • Ennis House, 1923
    • Storer House, 1923
    • Freeman House, 1924
    • Sturges House, 1939
    • Arch Oboler Gate House and Eleanor’s Retreat, 1940
    • Wilbur C. Pearce House, 1950

    “Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you.” – Frank Lloyd Wright Frank Lloyd Wright is often called America’s finest architect. There’s a reason he’s not known as “Los Angeles’s best architect” as one might call some of our mid-century masters like John Lautner, or Rudolph Schindler, Paul Williams, or even Wright’s ow...

    The Hollyhock House, was commissioned by oil heiress Louise Aline Barnsdall and named after her favorite flower. The Hollyhock House was Wright’s first foray in Los Angeles and is the onlyof the eight houses here that you can tour. The Hollyhock House is part of a ambitious living and arts complex set on 36 acres that was to include an avant-garde ...

    La Miniatura, or Millard House is located in Pasadena and is one of Wright’s most groundbreaking designs. Millard House is the earliest in Wright’s Textile Block house series. During this time, Wright challenged himself to do something with concrete, which he called “the cheapest (and ugliest) thing in the building world. Why not see what could be ...

    The house was designed in 1923 by 20th Century master architect Frank Lloyd Wright. One of Wright’s famous quotes is, “Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you.” With Ennis House, Wright’s idea was to craft an organic structure that literally seemed to rise from the hillside site. In fact, workers extracted decomposed...

    Built in 1923 for Dr. John Storer, this textile-block house is in the Hollywood Hills at 8161 Hollywood Boulevard. The home is instantly recognizable as one of Wright’s homes. It’s a private residence and not open to tours. But! If you want to know what it’s like inside, watch this video of Martha Stewart touring the house with Eric Wright. The Sto...

    Some may say this is Wright’s leastfamous of the four textile block homes. Perhaps that’s because from the street the house is seemingly hidden behind a system of Wright’s textile blocks, as the house itself sits on a steep hillside and the rest of the house extends to two additional levels down the slope. While guests at the Hollyhock House, Samue...

    Sturges House is the only example of Wright’s Usonian design in California. The simply gorgeous, seemingly floating home is located in Brentwood Heights and was commissioned by Lockheed engineer George D. Sturges and his wife. The same year this house was built, Wright also completed his most famous and acclaimed project: the Fallingwater residence...

    Situated on a rugged and remote site high in the Santa Monica Mountains, the Oboler complex is Wright’s only example of desert rubblestone construction in Southern California. In the 1940s, radio and television personality Arch Oboler and his wife Eleanor set out to create an estate called “Eaglefeather” on the 360-acre lot they owned in the Santa ...

    We’ve reached Wright’s final Los Angeles house. The Wilbur C. Pearce House located at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains is made of simple concrete block, with a dramatic, cantilevered roof covering the carport. Wilbur Pearce was a businessman who moved to Los Angeles in the mid-1940s to work for Firestone Tire and Rubber Company. Pearce and his...

  3. Wright buildings in the state, including a golf resort where you can and should spend the night this summer. Both interior and exterior tours are available of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House. (Joshua White) 1. Hollyhock House Location: Los Angeles (map) What to know: The one California building included in the UNESCO World Heritage List, the

    • Ennis House. Where: Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California. Visit: Not open to the public except for private tours but is easily visible from the street. Blade Runner!
    • Gordon House. When: Wednesday–Saturday from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m. Where: Silverton, Oregon. Visit: Tickets start at $20, thegordonhouse.org. The Gordon House is one of the last Usonian homes Wright designed (in fact, it was completed after the architect died) and is the only house he constructed in Oregon.
    • Mrs. Clinton Walker House. Where: Carmel-by-the-Sea, California. Visit: Not open to the public but visible from the beach. With its fairy-tale-like cottages and breathtaking coastline, Carmel-by-the-Sea has long been a must-stop on any road trip along California’s State Route 1—and this Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home, the only one he designed with a seaside view, gives all the more reason to tap the brakes.
    • Hollyhock House. When: Thursday–Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Where: East Hollywood, Los Angeles. Visit: Tickets start at $7, hollyhockhouse.org. In 1915, oil heiress and socialite Aline Barnsdall approached Wright to commission a theater.
  4. The Aline Barnsdall Hollyhock House in the East Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright originally as a residence for oil heiress Aline Barnsdall (built, 1919–1921). The building is now the centerpiece of the city's Barnsdall Art Park. In July 2019, along with seven other buildings designed by ...

  5. Houses and public buildings designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and still standing in California. Those with a red place marker are open to the public and some offer tours.