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National treasure

By Brad Hundt 5 min read
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Architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed Fallingwater. It is considered one of his crowning achievements. [Western Pennsylvania Conservancy]
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Visitors to Frank Lloyd Wright's architectural masterpiece Fallingwater, in Fayette County, can find a portrait of Pittsburgh department store magnate Edgar Kaufmann in the house. ([AP file photo]
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Visitors to Fallingwater, one of the architect Frank Lloyd Wright's best-known works, listen to tour guides as they stand on the concrete terraces in Mill Run. [AP file photo]
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Construction started on Fallingwater, the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home in Fayette County, 90 years ago. (Western Pennsylvania Conservancy)

Rain was threatening at Mill Run on Oct. 29, 1963, and its sound would have created a kind of chorus with the waterfall nearby.

A tent was set up in case Gov. William Scranton and other dignitaries needed to escape an autumn downpour. With no way of imagining the horror that would unfold in Dallas, Texas, a little more than three weeks later with the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, it was a day of celebration.

It was on that Tuesday that Fallingwater, the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed, three-story vacation home nestled in an eastern corner of Fayette County, was turned over to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy so it could be preserved and opened to the public and appreciated by the wider world.

“These buildings and these lands will be conserved,” Scranton said, according to UniontownĢƵ Evening Standard. “Not as empty shrines, but as a living vibrant agency for service to mankind.”

Those are pretty high-flown words for a house. But Fallingwater has never merely been a house. One of a little more than 1,000 structures Wright designed in his lifetime, Fallingwater is perhaps the most famous of the architectĢƵ creations, along with the Guggenheim Museum in New York. Its one-of-a-kind design has terraces stacked over a waterfall thatĢƵ part of the mountain stream Bear Run. It is a National Historic Landmark and has joined UNESCOĢƵ list of World Heritage sites, which also includes the Pyramids in Egypt, Mount Fuji in Japan and Westminster Abbey in London.

The word “iconic” is overused, but Fallingwater fits that designation. And though it was once a symbol of modernity, it is celebrating its 90th anniversary this year.

“The house rapidly became a symbol of modern architecture,” R. Jay Gangwere wrote in Carnegie Magazine in 1999. “Created in the midst of the Great Depression, the woodland retreat over the waterfall had a fast track into the American psyche. It was a personal escape into nature, produced at a time when Hollywood was creating escapist fantasies of its own about avoiding economic hardship. Millions of Americans, including unemployed workers in western Pennsylvania, could dream about life in a private retreat created by the most famous architect in America.”

FallingwaterĢƵ life began as a vacation home. In the 19th and 20th centuries, it was not uncommon for PittsburghĢƵ captains of industry and financial titans to have weekend and summer abodes well to the east of the cityĢƵ grit, grime and smoke. Andrew Carnegie had a summer cottage near Johnstown, the Mellon clan had homes in Westmoreland County, and Edgar Kaufmann, who operated KaufmannĢƵ Department Store, was similarly looking for a serene spot to take it easy.

The site had been used as a getaway for KaufmannĢƵ employees, but Kaufmann decided to use it for himself. Because his son, Edgar Kaufmann Jr., was an architecture aficionado, the recommendation was made that Wright handle its design.

The design Wright came up with took into account KaufmannĢƵ appreciation of the waterfall on the property. Wright later explained, “He loved the site where the house was built and liked to listen to the waterfall. So that was the prime motive in the design. I think you can hear the waterfall when you look at the design.”

The relationship between Wright and Kaufmann was at times contentious but ultimately fruitful. Over a quarter-century span, the Kaufmann family commissioned a dozen projects from Wright. This in spite of letters exchanged between the two about Fallingwater where Wright told Kaufmann, “I don’t know what kind of architect you are familiar with, but apparently it isn’t the kind I think I am. You seem not to know how to treat a decent one.” Kaufmann fired back, “I have put so much confidence and enthusiasm behind the whole project in my limited way, to help the fulfillment of your effort that if I do not have your confidence in the matter, to hell with the whole thing.”

Construction started on Fallingwater in April 1936. The June 5, 1936, edition of UniontownĢƵ Evening Standard contained a report on the front page about the cityĢƵ former mayor, William C. Hatfield, selling his home, and it noted, “That the Uniontown mountains continue to lure Pittsburghers was evidenced today when it became known that Edgar J. Kaufmann, president of the KaufmannĢƵ Department Store, has started construction of a palatial summer home here on Bear Creek in Stewart Township. While the cost of the residence is not known, it is expected to be one of the finest in the mountain district.”

The house was finally completed in 1939. It was given to KaufmannĢƵ son on his death in 1955, and he then gave it to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy in 1963. In the 62 years that the house has been available for tours it has become one of the commonwealthĢƵ top tourist draws and is a key draw in the Laurel Highlands region, which includes Fayette, Westmoreland and Somerset counties.

A number of events are planned at Fallingwater this year to mark the 90th anniversary of its construction, including a gala celebration Aug. 29 and Fayette County Appreciation Day Nov. 22. For information, go online to fallingwater.org or call 724-329-8501.

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