The Glass House offers
very little privacy, even on such a large estate, so Johnson built a second
building at the same time, one that is predominantly solid. (Skylights and
windows facing north bring in natural light.) The two buildings face each other
across a well-manicured lawn, a surface that reinforces the Glass House as
being a pavilion, a statement in the landscape.
The Glass House is
built of three main materials: glass, steel (painted black) and brick. The
glass panes are large (about 8 feet tall and 13 to 17 feet wide), but they
don't quite reach from ceiling to floor. Smaller panes at the base provide a
modern version of a chair rail at the perimeter, but they do not include
operable vents; doors in the center of each elevation would have to be opened
to naturally ventilate the interior.
The steel is carefully
articulated to blur the distinction between structure and framing. Unlike the
Farnsworth House's clear sense of structure, the Glass House appears to be a
roof propped upon glass walls and framing.
The third material is
brick, which is used for the floor and a bathroom enclosure that also acts as a
hearth (next photo). The herringbone pattern on the floor creates some
ambiguity between inside and outside, especially as it is always seen with the
lawn extending from it on all sides.
The interior of the Glass House is
completely exposed to the outdoors except for the a cylinder brick structure
with the entrance to the bathroom on one side and a fireplace on the other
side. The floor-to-ceiling height is ten and a half feet and the brick cylinder
structure protrudes from the top. The floor is also made of red brick laid out
in a herringbone pattern and is raised ten inches off of ground level. The only
other divisions in the house besides the bathroom are discreetly done with low
cabinets and bookshelves, making the house a single open room. This provides
ventilation from all four sides flowing through the house as well as ample
lighting.
Although the house is the primary
attraction on the site, Johnson used the expansive land around it to allow his
imagination to run and build thirteen more structures that include a guest
house, an art gallery, and a sculpture pavilion. The guest house, connected to
the Glass House with a stone path that lays over the expansive lawn immediately
surrounding it, is a heavy brick structure, contrasting the extreme lightness
and transparency expressed in the Glass House. The art gallery is buried
underground in order to not take away attention from the house, making it
windowless which is uncommon for a gallery. Wright’s other notable experiment
on the site included a sculpture gallery which is “an asymmetrical white-brick
shed with a glass roof…conceived as a series of interlocking rooms that step
down around an open, central space.”
Declared a National Historic Landmark in
1997, the Glass House is still considered a modern marvel. The beauty in its
composition along with the rolling landscape have people travelling to visit
and experience it firsthand every day, and with the lines of the
Glass House and the other buildings smoothly blending in with the lines of the
horizon and the surrounding landscape, one can feel a breathtaking sensation of
endlessness.
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