| This
residence, built originally for University of Wisconsin law professor Eugene
Gilmore, was designed at about the same time as Wright's more famous Prairie
style house in Chicago--the Robie House. Like the Robie House, it has a
kind of "prow," which led to its being called the "Airplane House." Like
the classic Prairie style house, it has a sense of horizontality, emphasized
by a low hipped roof and wide sweeping eaves, it features rows of leaded
casement windows on both floors, and it has a cantilevered porch roof. Gilmore
had purchased the hill top lot before engaging Wright's services; today
the views are obscured by trees and additional houses. |