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  1. Prairie School is a late 19th and early 20th-century architectural style, most common in the Midwestern United States. The style is usually marked by horizontal lines, flat or hipped roofs with broad overhanging eaves , windows grouped in horizontal bands, integration with the landscape, solid construction, craftsmanship, and discipline in the ...

    • Ransom Buffalow

      He designed several homes in the Riverside and Avondale...

  2. The Prairie School was a primarily residential architectural movement that began in Chicago yet rapidly spread across the Midwest. Ultimately its influence was felt around the world—most especially in north-central Europe and Australia.

    • The Prairie School
  3. The Prairie School is a child-centered, college-preparatory day school whose mission is to educate our children; develop their character; nurture their individual talents, interests, and abilities; and affirm their dignity and self-worth.

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  5. Horizontal lines were thought to evoke and relate to the wide, flat, treeless expanses of America's native prairie landscape. Prairie School is a late 19th and early 20th-century architectural style, most common in the Midwestern United States.

  6. The Prairie school describes the midwestern architects and designers whose works are based on the rhythms and colors of nature, and whose low, broad buildings seem to hug the earth, emulating the vast horizon line of the midwestern prairie.

  7. Jul 11, 2023 · There’s one architect who should be more widely acknowledged for sharing Prairie School ideals internationally, and no, it’s not Frank Lloyd Wright. The architect who defined the Prairie School style around the world is Marion Mahony Griffin.

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