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Storer House (Los Angeles)

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Storer House
Storer House, 2008
Storer House (Los Angeles) is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Storer House (Los Angeles)
Location8161 Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, California
Built1923
ArchitectFrank Lloyd Wright
Architectural styleModern Movement, Other
NRHP reference No.71000152[1]
LAHCM No.93
Significant dates
Added to NRHPSeptember 28, 1971
Designated LAHCM1972-02-23[2]

Storer House is a Frank Lloyd Wright house in the Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles built in 1923. The structure is noteworthy as one of the four so-called Mayan Revival style textile-block houses built by Wright in the Los Angeles area from 1922 to 1924.

Design of Storer House

The Storer House was built in 1923 for Dr. John Storer, a homeopathic physician.[3] Wright used the textile-block motif to "fit" the home into the hillside, trying to create the impression that the home was "a man-made extension of the landscape."[4] However, Wright biographer Brendan Gill described the Storer House as a disappointment on this score: "In direct contradiction to everything that Wright had earlier preached about the natural, nearly invisible joining of structure and site, the Storer House, small as it is, asserts its presence with a surprising degree of arrogance—an arrogance far more obvious in the 1920s, when the hillside lacked the softening effect of foliage, than it is today."[5]

The house is dominated by a large upstairs living room with a high ceiling, Mayan inspired columns, and tall narrow windows; the living room is the front facade facing the street.[4][6] The tall banks of windows flood the living room with natural light. Outside the living room, there are two terraces, one with a view of Hollywood and the other with a view of the hillside. The floor plan forms a T and has large public spaces, each with a fireplace. The dining room and kitchen are on the main floor. The house has 2,967 square feet (275.6 m2) with three bedrooms, a den, three bathrooms, staff wing and a spa.[3] The house was built without a front door, entrance being offered through a rear door, "as if to finalize the metaphor of privacy and retrenchment."[7] Actually there are five door/window openings in front, being very visually pleasing, but perhaps lacking the definitiveness of "one front door."

The house is built on a steep hillside in the Hollywood Hills at a time when the hills did not have the rich foliage present today. At the time of its construction, Storer House is said to have resembled a Pompeiian villa. Frank Lloyd Wright's son, Lloyd Wright, was both the on-site construction manager and the landscape architect, providing an illusion of a ruin barely visible within its jungle environment.

The Storer House was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 and designated as a Historic-Cultural Landmark (#96) in 1972 by the Los Angeles Cultural Heritage Commission. It was also included in Sydney LeBlanc's book The Architecture Traveler: A Guide to 250 Key 20th Century American Buildings.[6]

An homage to Wright was built in the Hollywood Backlot at Disney's California Adventure Park in Anaheim, California: a textile block restroom and seating area was based on the design of the Storer House.[8]

It is considered one of Wright's great masterpieces.

Wright's textile-block houses

Frank Lloyd Wright

Considered an example of Wright's pre-Columbian or early Modernist architecture,[3] Storer House is one of four textile-block houses he built in Southern California, the others being the Millard House, the Samuel Freeman House and the Ennis House. The textile-block houses were named for their richly textured brocade-like concrete walls.[4] The style was an experiment by Wright in modular construction that he called the Textile Block System.[9] He sought to develop an inexpensive and simple method of construction that would enable ordinary people to build their own homes with stacked blocks, tied together with steel rods.[9] One writer has described Wright's concept this way: "By unifying decoration and function, exterior and interior, earth and sky -- perforated blocks served as skylights -- Wright saw his Textile Block Method approach as an utterly modern, and democratic, expression of his organic architecture ideal."[9]

Wright was also intrigued by archaeological discoveries on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula and used elements from Mayan architecture and design in the Storer House.[4] Wright used sledgehammers and aluminum molds to imprint elaborate Mayan-inspired patterns into the blocks.[9] The four Southern California textile-block houses represented Wright's earliest uses of the exotic, monumental Mayan forms.[4] Storer House is the only one of Wright's textile-block houses to use multiple block patterns—four in all.

Wright's textile block houses did not catch on as he had hoped. As The New York Times later said of the California houses built by Wright in the 1920s: "It didn't help that he was obsessed at the time with an untested and (supposedly) low-cost method of concrete-block construction. What kind of rich person, many wondered, would want to live in such a house? Aside from the free-spirited oil heiress Aline Barnsdall, whom he fought with constantly, his motley clients included a jewelry salesman, a rare-book dealing widow and a failed doctor."[10]

Restoration by Joel Silver

View from street, 2008

By the early 1980s, the house had fallen into a dilapidated condition before being acquired in 1984 for $800,000 by motion picture producer Joel Silver.[11][12] Silver, who has produced such films as Lethal Weapon, Die Hard and The Matrix, began a restoration project in 1984. The restoration was carried out under the supervision of Wright's grandson, Eric Lloyd Wright, and Martin Eli Weil, past president of the Los Angeles Conservancy. One of the challenges in the restoration effort was to develop a formula to duplicate the structure's concrete blocks. Ultimately, replacement blocks were made using soil from the backyard mixed with cement to conform to Wright's concept of "organic architecture."[13] In addition to restoring the house, Silver also restored the original landscaping and installed a pool that had been planned but not built.[3] Eric Wright worked with Silver in completing elements included in the original plans.[14] The restoration project won awards from the California Council of the American Institute of Architects and the Los Angeles Conservancy.[15] In 2005, The New York Times wrote that the Storer House "is widely considered the best-preserved Wright building in Los Angeles."[10]

While the house had been put on the market for $1 million in 1981,[4] and Silver purchased it in 1984 for $800,000,[12] Silver put it on the market in 2001 for $3.5 million.[3][16] After putting "a small fortune" into the restoration and fixing leaky roofs, Silver had difficulty finding a buyer. Reports indicated that a similar home would sell for $1 million, leading Forbes magazine to ask: "Will someone pay a 400% premium to live in a piece of architectural history? Probably not. Even immaculately restored, the Storer House still has drawbacks: It's small, the address is just a shade east of swanky Beverly Hills and the other houses on the hills above invade its privacy."[12] Given the landscaping however, the house has great privacy from all of its neighbors. Silver ultimately sold the house in 2002 for $2.9 million, according to Los Angeles County property records.[citation needed]

  • One of the blocks in the house was used as the Silver Pictures logo from 1991 to 2005, shown at the end of The Matrix Trilogy, Conspiracy Theory, Cradle 2 The Grave, Swordfish, and Romeo Must Die.

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. ^ Department of City Planning. "Designated Historic-Cultural Monuments". City of Los Angeles. Retrieved 2010-06-15.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ruth Ryon (2001-02-03). "Home of the Week: Restoration Has All the Wright Detail". Los Angeles Times.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Above the Strip in Hollywood: Frank Lloyd Wright's Storer House on the market for $1 million". Los Angeles Times. 1981-06-06.
  5. ^ Brendan Gill (1998). Many Masks: A Life of Frank Lloyd Wright, p. 272. DaCapo Press. ISBN 0-306-80872-2.
  6. ^ a b Sydney LeBlanc (2000). The Architecture Traveler: A Guide to 250 Key 20th Century American Buildings, p. 38. W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-73050-6.
  7. ^ Kevin Starr (1991). Material Dreams: Southern California Through the 1920s, p. 223. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-507260-X.
  8. ^ "We're Pretty Sure..." PrairieMod. Retrieved September 2013. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  9. ^ a b c d Hugh Hart (2004-09-26). "Architecture; When the answers aren't just concrete". Los Angeles Times.
  10. ^ a b Hugh Eakin (2005-08-14). "Fixer-Uppers That Need Love and Concrete". The New York Times.
  11. ^ "Six Preservation Winners Named L.A. Conservancy Recognizes Work on Historic Buildings". Los Angeles Times. 1985-06-16.
  12. ^ a b c Robert Goff (1998-09-07). "Masterpieces or money pits?". Forbes.
  13. ^ "A Guide to the Best of Southern California: ARTS Harmony in Architecture". Los Angeles Times. 1990-06-24.
  14. ^ "The Creme de L.A. Creme; Architecture". Los Angeles Times. 2000-08-10.
  15. ^ "Conservancy to Offer Tours of Storer House". Los Angeles Times. 1986-09-14.
  16. ^ Tricia Johnson (2002-07-05). "Gimme shelter". Entertainment Weekly.