Edwin H. Cheney House

Edwin H. Cheney House (1903) located in Oak Park, Illinois, United States, was Frank Lloyd Wright's design of this residence for electrical engineer Edwin Cheney.[2] The house is part of the Frank Lloyd Wright-Prairie School of Architecture Historic District.[3] A brick house with the living and sleeping rooms all on one floor under a single hipped roof, the Cheney House has a less monumental and more intimate quality than the design for the Arthur Heurtley House. The intimacy of the Cheney house is due to the building not being a full story off the ground and being sequestered from the main street by a walled terrace. In addition, its windows are nestled between the wide eaves of the roof and the substantial stone sill that girdles the house.[4][5]

Edwin H. Cheney House
Location520 North East Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois
Coordinates41.895072°N 87.789585°W / 41.895072; -87.789585
ArchitectFrank Lloyd Wright
Architectural stylePrairie School
Part ofFrank Lloyd Wright-Prairie School of Architecture Historic District (ID73000699)
Added to NRHPDecember 4, 1973[1]

The living rooms, which take up the entire front of the house and open onto the walled terrace at the center, are trimmed in fir. Together they form a single longitudinal space under a continuous ceiling carried up in the form of a hip roof, the whole subdivided into dining room, living room, and library by wooden posts and cabinets. The basement features a large in-law suite. The house is currently a bed-and-breakfast inn.

It was this commission that precipitated the celebrated love affair between Wright, and Edwin's wife, Mamah Cheney (né Borthwick), the climax of which occurred in 1909 when Wright abandoned his architectural practice and left with Mrs. Cheney for a year in Europe. This era of Wright's life ended in 1914 when the former Mrs. Cheney (by then divorced, and legally Mamah Borthwick), her children, and four others, were murdered at Taliesin by an insane servant.

Notes

  1. "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
  2. http://www.peterbeers.net/interests/flw_rt/Illinois/Cheney_House/Cheney_House.htm
  3. Robert A. Bell and Roy G. Hlavacek, Oak Park Landmarks Commission, Village of Oak Park (March 27, 1973). National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Frank Lloyd Wright-Prairie School of Architecture Historic District (pdf). State of Illinois.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright & Prairie School Architecture in Oak Park, Paul E. Sprague, 1986
  5. http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WM1VTG
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References

  • Storrer, William Allin. The Frank Lloyd Wright Companion. University of Chicago Press, 2006, ISBN 0-226-77621-2 (S.104)
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