Historic district in Pleasantville, New York
United States historic place
Usonia Historic District is a planned community and national historic district in the Town of Mount Pleasant , adjacent to the village of Pleasantville , Westchester County, New York . In 1945, a 100-acre (0.40 km2 ) rural tract was purchased by a cooperative of young couples from New York City, who were able to enlist the students of Frank Lloyd Wright to build his Broadacre City concept. Wright decided where each house should be placed. Wright designed three homes himself and approved architectural plans of the other 44, which were designed by such architects as Paul Schweikher , Theodore Dixon Bower, Ulrich Franzen , Kaneji Domoto , Aaron Resnick and David Henken – an engineer and Wright apprentice.[ 2]
The layout of the neighborhood was planned by Wright in a circular manner, preserving most of the original trees and "encouraging the flow of the land". The balance of the homes were decreed to be in the modern "organic" style ordained by Wright. The community was named "Usonia " in homage to Wright, whose ideas on the way Americans should live together guided their plan.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012 as the Usonia Historic District .[ 1] The historic district encompasses 43 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 3 contributing structures.[ 2]
The Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Usonian homes in Pleasantville are:
Other homes include:
Notable residents
See also
References
External links
Private houses
Adams, M.
Adams, W. and J.
Adelman
Affleck
Allen–Lambe
Alsop
Arnold
Bach
Bachman–Wilson
Baird
Baker
Balch
Baldwin
Barton
Bazett
Beachy
Becker
Blair
Blossom
Bogk
Boulter
Boynton
Bradley
Brandes
Broad Margin
Brown
Buehler
Bulbulian
Charnley
Cheney
Christie
Cooke
Coonley
Copeland
Crimson Beech
Dana–Thomas
Davidson
Davis
DeRhodes
Dobkins
Ennis
Fabyan
Fallingwater
Fawcett
Forest
Foster
Fountainhead
Freeman
Fredrick
Fricke
Friedman
Fukuhara
G. Furbeck
R. Furbeck
Gale, L.
Gale, T.
Gale, W.
Gerts
Gilmore
Gillin
Glasner
Goetsch–Winckler
Gordon
Grant
Graycliff
Gridley
Hanna–Honeycomb
Hardy
Haynes
Heath
Heller
Henderson
Heurtley
Hickox
Hills
Hoffman
Hollyhock
Jacobs I
Jacobs II
Johnson
Jones
Kalil
Keland
Kentuck Knob
Keys
Kinney
Kraus
Lamberson
Lamp
Laurent
Levin
Lewis
Lewis, L.
Manson
Marden
D. D. Martin
W. E. Martin
May
McBean
McCarthy
Millard
Miller
Millard, G.
Moore
Mosher
Mossberg
Murphy
Neils
Olfelt
Palmer
Pappas
Parker
Pauson
Penfield
Peterson Cottage
Pew
Pope–Leighey
Rayward
Rebhuhn
Reisley
Richardson
Roberts
Robie
Roloson
Rosenbaum
Rudin
Samara
Sander
Schaberg
Schwartz
Serlin
Shavin
Smith, G. W.
Smith, M.
Smith, R.
Sondem
Spencer
Staley
Stockman
Storer
Stromquist
Sturges
Sullivan
Sunday
Sutton
Sweeton
Tan-Y-Deri
Thaxton
Thomas
Tomek
Tonkens
Tracy
Trier
Turkel
Wall
Walker
Walser
Walter
Westcott
Westhope
Weltzheimer
Willey
Williams
Willits
Wingspread
Winslow
Woolley
Wright, D. and G.
Wright, D. and J.
Wright, R.
Wynant
Yamamura
Young
Zeigler
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