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Walker Guest House

The Walker Guest House was a compact modern beach structure originally built on Sanibel Island, Florida, for Dr. Walter Walker. It was designed in 1952 by Paul Rudolph as an architectural response to Mies van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House and Philip Johnson’s Glass House.[1] It is considered a ground-breaking work of environmental design, and one of the most important works of architecture of the twentieth century.[2][3]

Walker Guest House
Location of Walker Guest House in Florida
Walker Guest House (the United States)
TypeExperimental design:
Skeletal wood frame with movable privacy panels
LocationSanibel, Florida, U.S.
Coordinates26°26′09″N 82°07′25″W / 26.43583°N 82.12361°W / 26.43583; -82.12361
Built1953
ArchitectPaul Rudolph
Architectural style(s)Modern architecture
International Style
Sarasota School of Architecture
Walker Guest House Floor Plan
(Library of Congress)

Radical design edit

Dr. Walker, grandson of Minneapolis lumber baron TB Walker was a patron of the arts, and commissioned rising architect Paul Rudolph to design a work of modern architecture for a newly acquired beach property on Sanibel Island, on the west coast of Florida. At the time, Sanibel was a pristine and undeveloped archipelago, accessible only by ferry boat. It was Rudolph’s first independent project after his split with partner Ralph Twitchell, and both client and architect shared a vision of radical simplicity based on its elemental surroundings.[4][5] A cubic, skeletal design was conceived using an eight foot by eight foot grid, vertically and horizontally, creating a twenty-four foot square (576 square feet). A slightly raised exo-steel frame built directly on the sand would support movable wood panels, enabling the house to seamlessly merge indoor and outdoor space. It was Rudolph's most clearly articulated and rigorously geometric residential project in Florida.[6]

Form and function edit

The structure was built entirely of lightweight steel, dimensional lumber, and glass in modular sections that enabled it to be easily transported and fabricated on the island. Its raised and nimble footprint was environmentally deliberate, creating an illusion that Rudolph described as “a spider crouching in the sand.”[7][8] It seemed to be placed perfectly in the dunes and scrub. The perimeter of the exterior frame featured either glass panels or screening to shield itself from insects. The interior was zoned geometrically by function; dining, living, and bedroom.

The most iconic feature of the house were the wrap-around adjustable wood panels that swung up and outward on the steel frame using pulleys and seventy-seven pound red-painted cannonball weights and cleats, earning the house the nickname ‘the cannonball house'.[9] This rigging system was similar to those on sailboats. This flexibility facilitated an almost limitless array of functions, from a completely private shelter to a wide-open and breezy pavilion. “With all the panels lowered the house is a snug cottage, but when the panels are raised it becomes a large screened pavilion,” Rudolph said about the home. “If you desire to retire from the world you have a cave, but when you feel good there is the joy of an open pavilion.”[10][11] The flat-wood panels also providing shade when fully extended, thus extending the living space into the adjacent landscape.[12]

Rudolph considered the guesthouse to be one of his favorite projects, exhibiting pure architectural ideals suited to its environment.[13][14]

The house was featured in Progressive Architecture,[15] McCalls,[16] and Architectural Forum.[17] Rudolph also discussed the essence of his ascetic design in Perspecta and The Journal of the American Institute of Architects.[18][19] In February 1957, Architectural Record nominated fourteen homes as part of their “One hundred years of significant building,” listing the most vigorous and imaginative design of houses in America. The Walker Guest House was included, among other works such as Fallingwater, Gamble House, Farnsworth House, and Glass House.[20]

In more recent years, the Walker Guest House has become an icon of elegant simplicity, a symbol of hopefulness, frugality, and practicality for the future.[21][22][23][24] In a Wall Street Journal article published in 2017, art critic Terry Teachout described the Walker Guest House as “a’tiny house’ that predates by more than half-century the current craze for scaled down dwellings.”[25]

Preservation edit

The Walker family owned and lived in the guesthouse for sixty-eight years. The guest house location, on one and a half acres of prime gulf real estate put it in danger of demolition. In order to preserve the structure, the family placed the building in the Sotheby’s “Important Design” auction, and it sold for $750,000 in 2019.[26][27] A video documentary of the building was produced, entitled Expert Voices: Paul Rudolph and the Dynamic Genius of the Walker House, featuring Walker family member Tian Dayton and Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger.[28][29]

[The Walker Guest House] will almost surely leave Sanibel Island, but the trade-off will be knowing that one of the most important designs by one of the 20th century’s most important architects—one that, by its nature, is not specific to its site, and could be set down almost anywhere—will be preserved.”

— Paul Goldberger [30]

The guesthouse was sold at auction for $750,000 to a private bidder, disassembled, and moved to California.[31]

The Sarasota Architectural Foundation built a full-scale replica of the guest house in 2015.[32] It was installed and opened for tours at the Ringling Museum for two years. It was moved in 2018 to Palm Springs, California for “Modernism Week”, the city's mid-century modern design festival. It was auctioned in 2020.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ "Paul Rudolph – A Life of Art & Architecture". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation.
  2. ^ "Hundred Years of Significant Buildings - Walker Guest House Sanibel Island" (PDF). Architectural Record. February 1957. p. 204.
  3. ^ "An American Icon: The Walker Guest House". Sotheby’s. Sotheby’s.
  4. ^ "Walker Guest House". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation.
  5. ^ "Walker Guest House". Paul Rudolph Foundation. Paul Rudolph Foundation.
  6. ^ King, Joseph, and Domin, Christopher (2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 96–100. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "A Spider In The Sand - Paul Rudolph's Antidote to Cold War Paranoia". Alastair Gordon Wall to Wall. Alastair Gordon \date=May 9, 2015.
  8. ^ "Walker Guest House". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation.
  9. ^ "Walker Guest House". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation.
  10. ^ Rudolph, Paul; Sibyl, Moholy-Nagy; Schwab, Gerhard (1970). The Architecture of Paul Rudolph. Thames & Hudson. p. 42. ISBN 9780500090572.
  11. ^ "Walker Guest House". SAH Archipedia. Society of Architectural Historians.
  12. ^ King, Joseph, and Domin, Christopher (2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 157. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Howey, John (1995). The Sarasota School of Architecture : 1941–1966. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0262082402.
  14. ^ King, Joseph, and Domin, Christopher (2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. New York, NY: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 133. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ "Design techniques 1953: Houses" (PDF). Progressive Architecture. January 1953. p. 72.
  16. ^ Gillies, Mary Davis (July 1954). "Open To The Outdoors". McCall’s. pp. 36–37.
  17. ^ "The Changing Philosophy of Architecture" (PDF). Architectural Forum. July 1954. p. 121.
  18. ^ "Regionalism in Architecture". Perspecta. 1957. pp. 17–18.
  19. ^ "Regionalism and the South". Journal of the AIA. April 1955.
  20. ^ "Hundred Years of Significant Buildings" (PDF). Architectural Record. February 1957. p. 204.
  21. ^ "Lonely Little Cannonball". Dwell. March 2004. p. 84.
  22. ^ "Challenging The Curtain Wall: Paul Rudolph's Blue Cross and Blue Shield Building". Journal of Architectural Historians. March 2007. p. 89.
  23. ^ Gordon, Alistair (April 10, 2015). "Tiny House on Sanibel Island Stands as a Symbol of Hope". Miami Herald.
  24. ^ "Rudolph: The Green Architect". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation.
  25. ^ Teachout, Terry (March 31, 2017). "Tiny House That Predates the Current Craze". Wall Street Journal.
  26. ^ "An American Icon: The Walker Guest House". Sotheby’s. Sotheby’s.
  27. ^ Franklin, Sydney (January 4, 2019). "Paul Rudolph's Walker Guest House is on sale". The Architect's Newspaper. The Architect's Newspaper.
  28. ^ "Paul Rudolph and the Dynamic Genius of the Walker Guest House". Sotheby’s Expert Voices. Sotheby’s.
  29. ^ Goldberger, Paul. "Paul Rudolph's Architectural Ideal". Sotheby’s. Sotheby’s.
  30. ^ Nielsen, Duncan (December 2, 2019). "Paul Rudolph's Legendary Walker Guest House Is Heading to Auction Next Week". Dwell. Dwell Magazine.
  31. ^ King, Joe (October 1, 2015). "The Original Walker Guest House is on the Move". Sarasota Magazine.
  32. ^ "Sarasota Architect Replicates Iconic Paul Rudolph Structure". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. January 2, 2020.
  33. ^ "The Rudolph masterpiece Is Sold - But You Still Have A Second Chance (With The Replica)". Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation. January 2, 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Rudolph, Paul; Sibyl, Moholy-Nagy; Schwab, Gerhard (1970). The Architecture of Paul Rudolph. Thames & Hudson. p. 240. ISBN 9780500090572.
  • Rudolph, Paul (2009). Writings on Architecture. Yale University Press. p. 164. ISBN 9780300150926.
  • Rohan, Timothy (2014). The Architecture of Paul Rudolph. New haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 290. ISBN 978-0300149395.
  • Rohan, Timothy (2017). Reassessing Rudolph. New haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 186. ISBN 9780300225860.
  • King, Joseph and Domin, Christopher (February 1, 2002). Paul Rudolph: The Florida Houses. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 248. ISBN 9781568982663.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Howey, John (1995). The Sarasota School of Architecture: 1941 - 1966. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0262082402.
  • Stern, Robert; Davidson, Cynthia (2009). Architecture on the Edge of Postmodernism. New haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 216. ISBN 978-0300153972.
  • Hitchcock, Henry-Russell and Drexler, Arthur (1952). Built in USA; post-war architecture (PDF). New York, NY: Museum of Modern Art. pp. 111–113. ISBN 978-1258490690.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Hochstim, Jan (2005). Florida Modern : Residential Architecture 1945-1970. Rizzoli New York. pp. 170–179. ISBN 978-0847826032.

External links edit

  • The Walker Guest House Project Page from the Paul Rudolph Institute for Modern Architecture archives
  • Walker Guest House – Paul Rudolph (UMass Dartmouth)
  • Walker Guest House Photographic Details – (Great Buildings)

walker, guest, house, compact, modern, beach, structure, originally, built, sanibel, island, florida, walter, walker, designed, 1952, paul, rudolph, architectural, response, mies, rohe, farnsworth, house, philip, johnson, glass, house, considered, ground, brea. The Walker Guest House was a compact modern beach structure originally built on Sanibel Island Florida for Dr Walter Walker It was designed in 1952 by Paul Rudolph as an architectural response to Mies van der Rohe s Farnsworth House and Philip Johnson s Glass House 1 It is considered a ground breaking work of environmental design and one of the most important works of architecture of the twentieth century 2 3 Walker Guest HouseLocation of Walker Guest House in FloridaShow map of FloridaWalker Guest House the United States Show map of the United StatesTypeExperimental design Skeletal wood frame with movable privacy panelsLocationSanibel Florida U S Coordinates26 26 09 N 82 07 25 W 26 43583 N 82 12361 W 26 43583 82 12361Built1953ArchitectPaul RudolphArchitectural style s Modern architectureInternational StyleSarasota School of Architecture Walker Guest House Floor Plan Library of Congress Contents 1 Radical design 2 Form and function 3 Preservation 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksRadical design editDr Walker grandson of Minneapolis lumber baron TB Walker was a patron of the arts and commissioned rising architect Paul Rudolph to design a work of modern architecture for a newly acquired beach property on Sanibel Island on the west coast of Florida At the time Sanibel was a pristine and undeveloped archipelago accessible only by ferry boat It was Rudolph s first independent project after his split with partner Ralph Twitchell and both client and architect shared a vision of radical simplicity based on its elemental surroundings 4 5 A cubic skeletal design was conceived using an eight foot by eight foot grid vertically and horizontally creating a twenty four foot square 576 square feet A slightly raised exo steel frame built directly on the sand would support movable wood panels enabling the house to seamlessly merge indoor and outdoor space It was Rudolph s most clearly articulated and rigorously geometric residential project in Florida 6 Form and function editThe structure was built entirely of lightweight steel dimensional lumber and glass in modular sections that enabled it to be easily transported and fabricated on the island Its raised and nimble footprint was environmentally deliberate creating an illusion that Rudolph described as a spider crouching in the sand 7 8 It seemed to be placed perfectly in the dunes and scrub The perimeter of the exterior frame featured either glass panels or screening to shield itself from insects The interior was zoned geometrically by function dining living and bedroom The most iconic feature of the house were the wrap around adjustable wood panels that swung up and outward on the steel frame using pulleys and seventy seven pound red painted cannonball weights and cleats earning the house the nickname the cannonball house 9 This rigging system was similar to those on sailboats This flexibility facilitated an almost limitless array of functions from a completely private shelter to a wide open and breezy pavilion With all the panels lowered the house is a snug cottage but when the panels are raised it becomes a large screened pavilion Rudolph said about the home If you desire to retire from the world you have a cave but when you feel good there is the joy of an open pavilion 10 11 The flat wood panels also providing shade when fully extended thus extending the living space into the adjacent landscape 12 Rudolph considered the guesthouse to be one of his favorite projects exhibiting pure architectural ideals suited to its environment 13 14 The house was featured in Progressive Architecture 15 McCalls 16 and Architectural Forum 17 Rudolph also discussed the essence of his ascetic design in Perspecta and The Journal of the American Institute of Architects 18 19 In February 1957 Architectural Record nominated fourteen homes as part of their One hundred years of significant building listing the most vigorous and imaginative design of houses in America The Walker Guest House was included among other works such as Fallingwater Gamble House Farnsworth House and Glass House 20 In more recent years the Walker Guest House has become an icon of elegant simplicity a symbol of hopefulness frugality and practicality for the future 21 22 23 24 In a Wall Street Journal article published in 2017 art critic Terry Teachout described the Walker Guest House as a tiny house that predates by more than half century the current craze for scaled down dwellings 25 Preservation editThe Walker family owned and lived in the guesthouse for sixty eight years The guest house location on one and a half acres of prime gulf real estate put it in danger of demolition In order to preserve the structure the family placed the building in the Sotheby s Important Design auction and it sold for 750 000 in 2019 26 27 A video documentary of the building was produced entitled Expert Voices Paul Rudolph and the Dynamic Genius of the Walker House featuring Walker family member Tian Dayton and Pulitzer Prize winning architecture critic Paul Goldberger 28 29 The Walker Guest House will almost surely leave Sanibel Island but the trade off will be knowing that one of the most important designs by one of the 20th century s most important architects one that by its nature is not specific to its site and could be set down almost anywhere will be preserved Paul Goldberger 30 The guesthouse was sold at auction for 750 000 to a private bidder disassembled and moved to California 31 The Sarasota Architectural Foundation built a full scale replica of the guest house in 2015 32 It was installed and opened for tours at the Ringling Museum for two years It was moved in 2018 to Palm Springs California for Modernism Week the city s mid century modern design festival It was auctioned in 2020 33 References edit Paul Rudolph A Life of Art amp Architecture Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Hundred Years of Significant Buildings Walker Guest House Sanibel Island PDF Architectural Record February 1957 p 204 An American Icon The Walker Guest House Sotheby s Sotheby s Walker Guest House Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Walker Guest House Paul Rudolph Foundation Paul Rudolph Foundation King Joseph and Domin Christopher 2002 Paul Rudolph The Florida Houses New York NY Princeton Architectural Press pp 96 100 ISBN 9781568982663 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link A Spider In The Sand Paul Rudolph s Antidote to Cold War Paranoia Alastair Gordon Wall to Wall Alastair Gordon date May 9 2015 Walker Guest House Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Walker Guest House Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Rudolph Paul Sibyl Moholy Nagy Schwab Gerhard 1970 The Architecture of Paul Rudolph Thames amp Hudson p 42 ISBN 9780500090572 Walker Guest House SAH Archipedia Society of Architectural Historians King Joseph and Domin Christopher 2002 Paul Rudolph The Florida Houses New York NY Princeton Architectural Press p 157 ISBN 9781568982663 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Howey John 1995 The Sarasota School of Architecture 1941 1966 Cambridge MA MIT Press p 65 ISBN 978 0262082402 King Joseph and Domin Christopher 2002 Paul Rudolph The Florida Houses New York NY Princeton Architectural Press p 133 ISBN 9781568982663 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Design techniques 1953 Houses PDF Progressive Architecture January 1953 p 72 Gillies Mary Davis July 1954 Open To The Outdoors McCall s pp 36 37 The Changing Philosophy of Architecture PDF Architectural Forum July 1954 p 121 Regionalism in Architecture Perspecta 1957 pp 17 18 Regionalism and the South Journal of the AIA April 1955 Hundred Years of Significant Buildings PDF Architectural Record February 1957 p 204 Lonely Little Cannonball Dwell March 2004 p 84 Challenging The Curtain Wall Paul Rudolph s Blue Cross and Blue Shield Building Journal of Architectural Historians March 2007 p 89 Gordon Alistair April 10 2015 Tiny House on Sanibel Island Stands as a Symbol of Hope Miami Herald Rudolph The Green Architect Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation Teachout Terry March 31 2017 Tiny House That Predates the Current Craze Wall Street Journal An American Icon The Walker Guest House Sotheby s Sotheby s Franklin Sydney January 4 2019 Paul Rudolph s Walker Guest House is on sale The Architect s Newspaper The Architect s Newspaper Paul Rudolph and the Dynamic Genius of the Walker Guest House Sotheby s Expert Voices Sotheby s Goldberger Paul Paul Rudolph s Architectural Ideal Sotheby s Sotheby s Nielsen Duncan December 2 2019 Paul Rudolph s Legendary Walker Guest House Is Heading to Auction Next Week Dwell Dwell Magazine King Joe October 1 2015 The Original Walker Guest House is on the Move Sarasota Magazine Sarasota Architect Replicates Iconic Paul Rudolph Structure Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation January 2 2020 The Rudolph masterpiece Is Sold But You Still Have A Second Chance With The Replica Paul Rudolph Heritage Foundation January 2 2020 Bibliography editRudolph Paul Sibyl Moholy Nagy Schwab Gerhard 1970 The Architecture of Paul Rudolph Thames amp Hudson p 240 ISBN 9780500090572 Rudolph Paul 2009 Writings on Architecture Yale University Press p 164 ISBN 9780300150926 Rohan Timothy 2014 The Architecture of Paul Rudolph New haven CT Yale University Press p 290 ISBN 978 0300149395 Rohan Timothy 2017 Reassessing Rudolph New haven CT Yale University Press p 186 ISBN 9780300225860 King Joseph and Domin Christopher February 1 2002 Paul Rudolph The Florida Houses Princeton Architectural Press p 248 ISBN 9781568982663 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Howey John 1995 The Sarasota School of Architecture 1941 1966 Cambridge MA MIT Press p 209 ISBN 978 0262082402 Stern Robert Davidson Cynthia 2009 Architecture on the Edge of Postmodernism New haven CT Yale University Press p 216 ISBN 978 0300153972 Hitchcock Henry Russell and Drexler Arthur 1952 Built in USA post war architecture PDF New York NY Museum of Modern Art pp 111 113 ISBN 978 1258490690 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Hochstim Jan 2005 Florida Modern Residential Architecture 1945 1970 Rizzoli New York pp 170 179 ISBN 978 0847826032 External links editThe Walker Guest House Project Page from the Paul Rudolph Institute for Modern Architecture archives Walker Guest House Paul Rudolph UMass Dartmouth Walker Guest House Photographic Details Great Buildings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walker Guest House amp oldid 1218127884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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