Architecture Canal This house looked at the “Ennishaus” in Los Angeles, one of Frank Lloyd Wright's best -known houses. This incredible brick house was designed after its Prairie school and was different from anything someone had seen before. The house was assembled rather than built and uses more than 27,000 interlocking textile blocks to create a unique style of ancient modernity.
Ennis House Towers about Los Feliz like an old monument that was reinterpreted for the jazz age. The Los Angeles' Designed Los Angeles awareness, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1924 by Frank Lloyd Wright and composed of more than 27,000 patterned “textile blocks”, mixes Mayaa-inspired mysticism with the latest modernism.
The house appeared in a series of television programs and films. Unfortunately, it was damaged during the earthquake by Northridge and the flood of 2005 1994. The house was completely restored with original block forms and modern materials to give the house more stability.
Craftsmen gave new blocks with shapes from surviving original, stainless steel pencils, torn walls, underground drains that blown away from the hill, and a hidden steel frame gave the house that always lacked the spine.
This house is particularly special because Wright looked at a simple brick and saw a uniquely beautiful house that fit perfectly with its surroundings.
What thinks about the drama of the restoration or the thrill of cinematic Kame is the clarity of Wright's experiment: a single idea that has reached its limits. He presented concrete to the “Gutter Rescue” of building materials that were increased to the dignity of the sculpture; He was looking for a house that felt dismantled by his own hill; He wanted walls that were as much decorations as structure.



