Edith Farnsworth House Is A Beautiful Disaster

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Barchetta

Barchetta

Күн бұрын

Edith Farnsworth House is one of the most important architectural landmarks constructed in the 20th century. It was an uncompromised vision of its architect and spawned countless imitations. The minimalist aesthetic came at a heavy cost. Originally designed as a weekend escape tucked away from prying eyes, the home went well over budget, had countless engineering compromises, and turned client and architect against each other. Edith Farnsworth House sent shockwaves throughout the architectural community upon its completion and it’s still reeling from it nearly 70 years later.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. She knew he was a prominent figure in the field, but couldn’t tie any buildings to him. Outside of a few architectural circles, he was a relative unknown in the United States. He spent most of his career making a name for himself in Europe. His work before the Second World War included the Barcelona Pavilion and the Villa Tugendhat, which were completed in 1929 and 1930, respectively. These were watershed moments in the modernist movement and actually predated Keck’s World’s Fair home by several years. Mies could have continued to add to his portfolio, but deteriorating conditions in his native Germany forced him to immigrate to the United States in 1938.
The two of them spent 1946 and 1947 going to the site and planning their course of attack. Mies thought the plot was beautiful, though it presented them with a unique problem if you could even call it that. Architects will usually find the best view on the lot and then try to find ways to design the structure around it. The “issue” was that every view of the plot was sublime. He couldn’t emphasize just one. This intertwined with another unique aspect of the acreage. It was shielded very well from prying eyes. Forestry to the north obstructed the view from River Road and the nearest bridge was a half-mile to the west. A large sugar maple tree would also obscure the house from those on the river to the south.
0:00 INTRO
0:46 ORIGINS
3:59 PLANNING
8:24 CONSTRUCTION
12:36 LAYOUT/PROS AND CONS
18:06 LAWSUIT
22:56 LATER YEARS/LEGACY
Robert Silman Video
vimeo.com/93662160?embedded=t...
SOURCES
WWW.barchetta.co/farnsworth-house-sources

Пікірлер: 246
@terraguttierez2996
@terraguttierez2996 Жыл бұрын
Studying "great architecture" and then finding out that theyre all actually horribly designed and not actually livable and are contrary to the function part of architecture is hilarious
@petercollingwood522
@petercollingwood522 Жыл бұрын
That's true. But in this case a lot of the issues could simply have been fixed if the architect was't such a git and didn't stick it next to the river. And of course if HVAC could have been incorporated.
@tokarukora7272
@tokarukora7272 Жыл бұрын
But it is what happens all of the time. There are reasons why architecture has developed in a certrain way over millenia. When architects decide to do something completely different because they want to express themselves in art, that is fine. But they always lose something on the way, most of the time it is practicality and livability.
@EustaH
@EustaH Жыл бұрын
Given that this house is an icon of modernism which main slogan says "form follows function" - it seems even more ironic.
@ingvarhallstrom2306
@ingvarhallstrom2306 Жыл бұрын
Welcome to the world of Starchitects.
@quincyg712
@quincyg712 Жыл бұрын
Wouldnt say its design is horrible, the design is great, but yes, its engineering and function could have been considered a lot more.
@thomasspravka1370
@thomasspravka1370 Жыл бұрын
Mies, the godfather of the horrible "Glass Box" movement! I was able to visit the Illinois Institute of Technology. They took me outside to look at a corner of the building, pointing at it like it was the most innovative thing they had ever seen. The corner of the building!
@thomasdevine867
@thomasdevine867 Жыл бұрын
It's beautiful, but you couldn't rest there. It has no cosiness. And the privacy issues are bad too. It's only good for parties in lovely weather. An expensive tent.
@AmosAmerica
@AmosAmerica Жыл бұрын
Great post. Love VDR's work, but his ego... putting the house in a known flood plane and hoping for the best - is inexcusable. That road expansion was also predictable, so moving it to higher ground away from the road would have stopped much of this unnecessary drama. The lack of proper HVAC is mind-numbing. He did not care about the clients true comfort , longevity, or finances... Only his desires. If it had been anyone else, these design decisions would definitely have been challenged rigorously before construction.
@acastrohowell
@acastrohowell Жыл бұрын
Amen
@DrivingPeter
@DrivingPeter Жыл бұрын
"Artistic" architects dont care about their clients. This is still true today. After one experience with these types of architects, and can assure you - NEVER AGAIN.
@wildlifegardenssydney7492
@wildlifegardenssydney7492 Жыл бұрын
A specialist Dr so busy she wanted a retreat to unwind from the stress…….the architect did not care…about the brief…about his client….about her wellbeing…her budget. So rare to have a female specialist doctor….especially at that time….this would have greatly impacted her life😢
@cdub5033
@cdub5033 Жыл бұрын
Yup, he is happy to piss away unlimited amounts of a clients money just to massage his own inflated "professional" ego. The arrogance of this architect guy is breathtaking.
@scottscottsdale7868
@scottscottsdale7868 Жыл бұрын
How NOT to build a house and how NOT to run litigation. Oh my god.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
not if you're a lawyer charging hrly.
@jamiebusch9406
@jamiebusch9406 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful documentary. I am an architect, and was an apprentice at Taliesin, and so am very familiar with Frank Lloyd Wrights many struggles with clients, budgets, and the weather - but this case study really puts it all in perspective. to paraphrase one quip by a client when their roof leaked during an important dinner party "well, that's what you get for leaving a work of art out in the rain.." Architecture is like no other art. It costs large amounts of other peoples money. You have to deal with gravity, earthquakes, snow, ice, contractors, building codes, local officials, neighbors, critics, and the judgment of history. You don't get to hide the work you don't like, or that goes badly. Not for the faint of heart- especially if you try to do something special. When you do, however, it is incredible how people respond, and how much time and effort they will spend to preserve even a "beautiful disaster.." Thanks again.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
i hear you. i designed and built homes in Tx the Cal Bay Area and Vancouver, BC. 2000 Sausalito small town big city problems they dumped on the developer. neighborhood design review like the Roman circus. i could write books.
@conbertbenneck49
@conbertbenneck49 Жыл бұрын
I had architect friends and they used to rave about Frank Lloyd Wright's work, but I used to look at them and tell them no way would I ever want to live in a house designed and furnished by the architect. When I saw his stove in the kitchen, that told me that he had never cooked a dinner. If I had that house, the first thing I'd do is toss out the gas stove with it's little crowns to hold the pots and replace it with a restaurnat type sove where I can push a pot or pan anywhere on the cooking surface without the danger of it falling off the edge of his "crowns" and spilling hot soup all over me such as in the FLW version. Oh, and the house leaks too? Didn't he learn to design a proper roof?
@ransomcoates546
@ransomcoates546 Жыл бұрын
@@conbertbenneck49 No.
@Brian-nt1hh
@Brian-nt1hh 7 ай бұрын
As we know now, worth every penny. What a concept, folly becomes fantastic. Thx for this in depth expose’.
@EarlLedden
@EarlLedden Ай бұрын
Who is the successor to FLW? I'm not seeing any FLW like houses anywhere. I often thought there would be a BIG market for FLW 'light" houses for empty nesters ...one floor and smaller, modern and functional.
@33Donner77
@33Donner77 Жыл бұрын
MAMMA MIA ! At least Edith Farnsworth got her place in history. All I can afford is a trailer made of glass that is raised on poles, and I can pretend.
@DrivingPeter
@DrivingPeter Жыл бұрын
This illustrates so well the cockiness of most architects.
@astron1000
@astron1000 Жыл бұрын
Not "most architects" but it's true of narcissistic architects. Just as it's true of narcissistic politicians and CEO's. These kind of people often achieve great things (and often obtain great admiration of others), but it's at the expense of practicality and the lives of everyday people. Run away from narcissists. Run far, far away. They are toxic.
@jtcorey7681
@jtcorey7681 3 ай бұрын
Seems like a necessary characteristic in architects, self absorption. It takes that to get something unusual actually built.
@conbertbenneck49
@conbertbenneck49 Жыл бұрын
The architect may think it's a wonderful creation, but I don't want to live in his aquarium.
@bobmitchell8012
@bobmitchell8012 Жыл бұрын
That’s a shite load of cash for a glass box !!
@jamesslate1026
@jamesslate1026 Жыл бұрын
Mies was very experimental in his architecture, and many times, the technology didn't align with his artistic vision. This house actually comes the closest to his personal goal of building a structure with no interior beams, entirely supported by its exterior. I visited the Farnsworth house years ago with a tour group sponsored by The Art Institute of Chicago. During the tour, I remember the story of how Edith Farnsworth didn't really understand the reality of living in a glass house until her first night sleeping on the property. Then she installed curtains for privacy which only angered the architect, destroying his minimalist vision of the building. The second owner, Peter Palumbo, added a large garage/barn on the grounds to house his collection of vintage cars, which he would drive down Michigan Ave in Chicago whenever he came to visit.
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Жыл бұрын
Curtains were a good idea. Looks like Meis didn't understand that a woman alone at a remote country retreat house might not appreciate that exposed feeling of an all glass house. A pack of 4 or 5 trained guard dogs patrolling outdoors may have helped, too. And, the architect's arrogant dismissal of flood plain possibilities was really irresponsible. Architecture is not just art for art's sake.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@billolsen4360 this utube is good except for the stupid "climate change" bs. stop the stupidity. Mies the genius with the ego to match. a plague of so many "i drew it so build it!!!" architects
@thesongbird2383
@thesongbird2383 Жыл бұрын
Definitely a prowler's dream house!
@sallyreno6296
@sallyreno6296 Жыл бұрын
An architect who insists on building a residence on a site that is certain to flood, may be "experimental" but he's also a moron.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@sallyreno6296 he's not a moron, but just another egotist. Wright the same. both men great and terrible.
@stevekovacs4093
@stevekovacs4093 Жыл бұрын
When I think of all the fabulous mansions and unique houses that only lasted a few decades before they were razed, I'm confused by all the resources used to salvage this quirky small home.
@davidsauls9542
@davidsauls9542 Жыл бұрын
Excellent documentary. Thank you. The Doctor seems to have been played by the Architect, It ruined her financially. This is not rare.
@kwisin1337
@kwisin1337 Жыл бұрын
I feel very humble to have found your efforts, Thank you for your time and energy you put into your work.
@Barchetta
@Barchetta Жыл бұрын
Thanks. That means so much to me.
@johnkeviljr9625
@johnkeviljr9625 Жыл бұрын
While the Plano House is ultimately very special, Mies severely abused the trust of his client. That abuse of trust, drives people away from the use of architects.
@cdub5033
@cdub5033 Жыл бұрын
This architect probably thought he could easily take advantage of a woman with money to spend, who he thought didn't know better than him.
@rogermccaslin5963
@rogermccaslin5963 Жыл бұрын
As a regular Joe that can't afford architecture as art, I find Mr. Mies, as presented here, appalling. Grading to within a tenth of an inch, plug welding the structure, travertine floors, etc. all look really cool but are ridiculously expensive to pull off. When presented with the budget, he obviously ignored that little aspect of the project and insisted on construction that would obviously create costs that outsized the budget by leaps and bounds. Also, the basic needs of the design - to make a comfortable living space - were apparently ignored to create his vision. As an art object, this may get a pass but as a home, I'd say it's a fail. And Mr. Mies gets a fail as an architect/builder here as well. I believe he had a responsibility to his client and he absolutely ignored it.
@dmorga1
@dmorga1 Жыл бұрын
This is by far the most comprehensive video exploration of the Farnsworth House I've ever seen. Your research is deep and thorough. The only bit I'd add to the whole Edith and Mies war is that I read somewhere that Mies already had this design of a glass house sketched. And by sketched, I mean he had a fully realized vision of this glass house before he met Edith, and he managed to find a buyer for his idea. He definitely didn't care about costs or mundane client management considerations, but he was fully willing to go down to the job site and hand-pick travertine. He was an odd fellow. Some suspected that Edith, a very smart and interesting person herself, had been enamored of Mies since the dinner party, and that his abrupt ending of the relationship with a large bill for this services broke her heart. Who knows? But i guess it's clear Mies wasn't good at client management. Ah well, I did visit some 6 years ago and the house was OK but you're right that the new ownership foundation has spent a lot of time trying to execute this flood prevention design. As pretty as the house is, it's rather underwhelming in person, partly because Edith lost the battle against Illinois and the lot is nothing like it was in 1950. Traffic now roars by it. I think the house should either be put in a museum, or moved somewhere. People who argue it's inextricably linked to the pastoral environment of the Fox River site neglect to mention the site is simply nothing like it was. It is remarkable, but not very livable or practical. I was impressed by the air curtain forced air design against the glass. The radiant floors were also inspired. But the constant maintenance of the tile and the glass lantern bug attraction of a glass house in nature, in the summer, was also a poor decision that resulted in numerous compromises.
@cipriannecsutu
@cipriannecsutu Жыл бұрын
For me the house looks perfect flooded as well un-flooded. Too bad the water level sometimes gets too high though.
@Jorjgasm
@Jorjgasm Жыл бұрын
Great video. I loved the line "a staple of modernist architecture, but as a space to be lived in, it leaves something to be desired" :))) That sums up a lot of the prestigious modernist buildings. Starchitecture which is a disaster in terms of comfort, cost, maintenance, livability and survivability. And the poor man's modernism is a utilitarian hellhole.
@ReddoFreddo
@ReddoFreddo Жыл бұрын
The Barcelona pavilion is beautiful, this house, and a lot of modern villas being built today look like the dollar store versions of that, and those skyscrapers they later designed were pretty soleless.
@sterlinglewis5700
@sterlinglewis5700 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the history of this magnificent but fatally flawed project. Van der Rohe reminds me of 'The Fountainhead', and its intransigent architect who could allow no compromise to his 'elevated' vision. In the final analysis, van der Rohe was really working for himself, and to hell with the client. Placing the house in the flood plain was bad enough, but to altogether disregard the weather is evidence of his narcissism. Selecting the most luxurious - but inappropriate - materials further compromised the outcome. I note the photographs show a badly cracked and uneven entry pad, as well as water staining in odd places. Ms. Farnsworth got a beautiful Work of Art. It's a shame it was never a real home.
@georgevavoulis4758
@georgevavoulis4758 Жыл бұрын
I feel so sorry for Ms.Farnsworth having to wait years before the house was ready and this stressful litigation .
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@georgevavoulis4758 she had her own money flowing ego too.
@Dan-oj4iq
@Dan-oj4iq Жыл бұрын
I think the entire project from beginning to end was either an unattended prank (without Mies stopping to think about it) or at the least very tongue in cheek.
@TheValrbrock
@TheValrbrock Жыл бұрын
Awesome research. Very informative. Keep them coming!!!
@swoondrones
@swoondrones Жыл бұрын
Mies is an extraordinary architect. I've been inside the Barcelona Pavilion. Stunning. If the pools were salt water to swim in, it would be astonishing. Farnsworth House is amazing. I'd probably have it in the black metal Mies used in other projects.
@BlahBleeBlahBlah
@BlahBleeBlahBlah Жыл бұрын
Another great video, I wish you’d get the views your work deserves. So much detail and well presented with your editing - use of photos and animations are great. Thanks for this :-)
@Barchetta
@Barchetta Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@WillN2Go1
@WillN2Go1 Жыл бұрын
I've been around several houses of this style and period, knew owners (and a few architects.) Here's a few things I've learned (most are probably obvious). First, the design. What looks great on paper might be difficult to achieve in reality. One Mies/Johnson inspired house I noticed as I approached it had bold line (header) over the opening portico and then a line of an adjacent cantilever. It's clear these should have lined up. This wasn't possible without greater cost and anticipating the issue before construction. It hadn't been. (The required height of the beam, holding up the ceiling and supporting the second floor, makes this impossible, unless one of the two lines was filled out and 'cheated.' This would've been desirable but in the middle of construction too expensive and delaying.) So 'Great Architect' also includes the qualification: they can get the thing built retaining the over all vision. Building is all compromises, great architecture is supposed to be uncompromising. It's just not so. Great architecture requires intelligent often very clever compromises. (Young architects, reading Foundation and throwing a hissy doesn't cut it.) Second, because of the materials and systems available from the 1910s through the 1960s all of these places have leaky roofs, almost no insulation, leaky windows (even the non opening ones), completely ineffective HVAC. (When you visit Falling Water and then you walk up to the annex you realize, Wright's Falling Water is great architecture, but this annex is for humans to live in.) For a bit over the past 30 years insulated glass, much much better roofing material, insulation, LED lights, HVAC, etc have now made this type of architecture practical. There are some amazing and livable houses. There are houses like this in the high desert in direct sunlight and the wind. (>38C in summer
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
this was a good presentation except for the stupid "climate change" bs. stop the stupidity. Mies the genius with the ego to match. a plague of so many "i drew it so build it!!!" architects btw i got thrown out of the Ennis house by the owner in 1980. i drove up hot and tired and finally found it. his good looking secretary said i could go in and take some pics quickly as a state senator was coming for a dinner party. we flirted. then a short pissed off bald headed guy with a white walrus stach showed up, the owner he said "ok BUT NO PHOTOS!" the mood broken i went in to quickly look around. i found the perfect shot for a pic, the long hallway with windows to the west and snapped it. just then the little guy peeked around a corner and yelled I SAW THAT! anyway, i left. lol i designed and built homes in Tx the Cal Bay Area and Vancouver, BC. 2000 Sausalito small town big city problems they dumped on the developer. neighborhood design review like the Roman circus. i could write books.
@bwake
@bwake Жыл бұрын
A careful examination of the site would have told them just how high the flood waters would rise. It might not have been so pretty if the stilts were high enough to keep the house above the flood water.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
lol. the arch wanted the earthwork done to the 1/10 of an inch. it was wisely suggested he move it to a higher part of the land. nope
@OurZeroFuture
@OurZeroFuture Жыл бұрын
Great video and effort in the research put into this!
@JadenFox
@JadenFox Жыл бұрын
Amazing story... they started out bickering over thousands of dollars in costs, and now preservation has the home in the millions... mind blowing. Soooo much money sunk into such a simple design concept. Yet, Edith's name lives on through her house. Fascinating story, thanks Barchetta.
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Жыл бұрын
Her professional career was very remarkable too!
@Marian87
@Marian87 Жыл бұрын
What a giant headache. Just wanting a weekend house and getting an expensive pain in the wazoo for the original owner, but also for generations to come. I hope it inspires generations to come on how NOT to build a house.
@Marian87
@Marian87 Жыл бұрын
@@henriqueoliveira7454 Influencing lots of people doesn't correlate to quality, or that the idea that influences people is good, beautiful, worthy of praise and respect for generations, etc. We now live in a world full of influencers who can reach from thousands to tens of millions of people if not more, but doesn't mean much in absolute terms. Are they all geniuses? These modernist architects seem to have held their vision in higher regard than anything else, like long term livability, usability, the limits of contemporary technology, the effect of water, the client's wants and needs, etc. I mean anybody can be a genius architect if they are held in high regard just for ignoring all the rules. I'm sad, angry, frustrated that the entirety of architecture, all the other styles and regional traditions are taught as a single object in most schools as the History of Architecture, but the rest is just functionalism shrouded in modernist ideology. And what actually gets built most of the time doesn't satisfy anyone, is just the most functional building to make the most profit. Modernist architecture is like a religion that makes its students believe that it's the only good way of making buildings while scoffing at the rest of humanity which appreciates more the traditional way of making buildings, more uniform in size, but with more details and colorful. This can be plainly seen by the amount of people visiting, older towns and cities like, Paris, Venice, Prague and many more compared to steel and glass gardens.. Even in New York the most attractive sky scrapers are the ones built up until the 50-60s with brick or stone facades and many details. I work as draftsman at a small architecture firm and the most popular type of building we design is based on the local traditional peasant houses or swiss/austrian chalets. The rest are modernist, but modest and we count ourselves lucky when a client largely follows our drawings in terms of facades and fittings. Modernist "genius" architects have been a BAD influence on architecture for far too long.
@ILLAILLS
@ILLAILLS Жыл бұрын
Visited this house last year. Definitely beautiful
@Brian-os9qj
@Brian-os9qj Жыл бұрын
If factual, this is the best coverage of the Farnsworth House.
@nharwood111
@nharwood111 Жыл бұрын
High quality production perfect audio with an amazing presenter. One question why so few videos lately?
@stevenikitas8170
@stevenikitas8170 6 ай бұрын
I must see the house someday. I was just in New York last week. I walked up Park Avenue and enjoyed seeing the Seagram Building once again. When I lived in New York, I worked around the corner and spent many hours sitting on the Seagram plaza.
@MemeMan_MEMESQUAD
@MemeMan_MEMESQUAD Жыл бұрын
Wow... who could've thought of a box with no sides. Truly revolutionary. I'm so glad architects really build on the work of the old masters, instead of making cultureless piles of geometry that are uncomfortable to be around and in
@juanmartindesimone1845
@juanmartindesimone1845 8 ай бұрын
I visited the house in 2010. It was impossible to be close because it was heated by the sun like a giant oven. Inside, the air conditioning was at full steam all day... I imagine that in winter it would be the same, but in reverse... I estimate that if they turned it off, everything inside would catch on fire... Ha ha ha. Furthermore, it was impossible to be inside without sunglasses because the reflection of the sun on the glass blinded you... I suppose that as a concept it contributed a lot, but as a house it was unlivable.
@gregoryambres1897
@gregoryambres1897 Жыл бұрын
💪🏆💪 Your narration voice is AMAZING. 💪🏆💪
@citileft
@citileft 8 ай бұрын
Mies is the greatest architect of the past 100 years. Period. This house is stunning. His glass tower the Seagram Building in midtown Manhattan is the as beautiful as the Parthenon
@_jpg
@_jpg 4 ай бұрын
Please mark this with /s, some crazy fellows out there with a severe lack of architectural understanding might take that serious 😂
@sumipan9
@sumipan9 8 ай бұрын
please do more architecture!
@TheKyPerson
@TheKyPerson 27 күн бұрын
This is very interesting but I always thought the house looked like a single wide mobile home made out of glass and steel. It looks quite uncomfortable and all but unlivable. As for the flooding....my son and daughter rented a tiny house near a lake that would sometimes flood if there was a heavy rain. The owner of the house had it raised up on a taller foundation and installed stairs. It worked well to keep the house safe and dry. Both of my children live in very nice houses now, but they still look back on that tiny house with great fondness.
@towntownbill
@towntownbill Жыл бұрын
The house was nothing but problems and continues to be nothing but problems. But you end the video by saying "Hopefully it can endure so it can inspire generations to come." Why? Because it so beautifully encapsulates everything wrong with buildings today? It paid no attention to the concerns of the site, it sprang from a horrible relationship with between a client and an egotistical architect, it went way over budget, its an uncomfortable space in winter and summer, its incredibly energy inefficient, it costs millions to maintain... As art its beautiful. As architecture its horrible.
@georgevavoulis4758
@georgevavoulis4758 Жыл бұрын
First video about any of these fancy architect designer houses I always wondered how well made they were
@Nostalg1a
@Nostalg1a Жыл бұрын
Thank you, more people need to see beyond these hacks of startarchitects and their ego.
@sebastiandelacruzcaicedo
@sebastiandelacruzcaicedo Жыл бұрын
I see your point, it definitely has flaws, I think they can be attributed to the fact that a bulding like this was new to his time, in the end Edith could have choosen to make a regular functioning house, but we wouldn't be talking about her former house today
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@sebastiandelacruzcaicedo sounds like Edith had a big ego herself and was not overly bright.
@honeyrococo
@honeyrococo Жыл бұрын
How did it pay no attention to the concerns of the site?
@TheValrbrock
@TheValrbrock Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@swoondrones
@swoondrones Жыл бұрын
Geez. So much cost on the least important items. Double-glazing is essential for such a building.
@georgevavoulis4758
@georgevavoulis4758 Жыл бұрын
Pretty sad when world famous architect makes a house that's all problems ,problems and you have prefabricated kit houses from Sears department stores still standing with way fewer problems .
@scottmcshannon6821
@scottmcshannon6821 Жыл бұрын
beautiful disaster is a good term for the house. the architect wanted to make a masterpiece no matter what the clients budget was, he lied to her constantly. then in the end the house was only livable in the spring an d fall. mies proved to be an asshole who didnt give a shit for his client.
@NewCultureLiving
@NewCultureLiving 4 ай бұрын
Everything exist for a reason, although it was a disaster, it was at the same time irresistibly beautiful. The architectural representation illustrates history and future. A wonderful masterpiece.
@michaeljdauben
@michaeljdauben Жыл бұрын
Wonderfully informative video. I grew up in the Chicago area and always had an interest in architecture, so I knew a little about this house. I never really heard before about all the design, construction, and financial problems of building and maintaining the house, though. Still a beautiful home, but not one I think I'd want to own or live in. 😅
@tmcb_
@tmcb_ Жыл бұрын
Plano is pronounced PLAY-no.
@edgarfranceschi8338
@edgarfranceschi8338 Жыл бұрын
I suppose you must have done a video on Fallingwater , the architectural sister - but a lot more famous-of this house. Loved the video. The drama. What people do.
@nemonemo6285
@nemonemo6285 11 ай бұрын
A famous landmark building, which had very simple fixable problems.
@jonchalk3855
@jonchalk3855 Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favourite houses in terms of design and esthetics.
@mugglescakesniffer3943
@mugglescakesniffer3943 Жыл бұрын
I am from Plano and you said Plano wrong.
@poopy5101
@poopy5101 Жыл бұрын
Not even Feng Shui can fix the interior. It's already dead right when Mies planned the house
@ryoichiwatanabe648
@ryoichiwatanabe648 Жыл бұрын
I don't know but maybe chill a bit with the vignette, otherwise great video and content! Keep it up!!
@michaeltutty1540
@michaeltutty1540 Жыл бұрын
Had that house been in Ontario, Canada, an in the City of Toronto or nearby suburbs, the land would have been expropriated during 1955, subsequent to Hurricane Hazel in 1954. All flood plains were deemed unsuitable for residential buildings and very few industrial buildings. Flood plains were, and still are, designated parkland. Sensible. As a piece of architecture, this house is a study in how not to design and build a dwelling. Can't really call it a house, and certainly not a home. The only way to save it as something useable is to replace all the glass with double panes of insulated glass. For security, a third layer, external to the others, of hurricane glass would not go amiss.
@MrReedling
@MrReedling Жыл бұрын
It’s ironic, that even the most famous architect of the era couldn’t even build a proper building when he tried to.
@claudiadarling9441
@claudiadarling9441 Жыл бұрын
The 20th century saw an interesting divorce of architectural design and quality engineering/craftsmanship. Earlier architects, even pioneering ones like Louis Sullivan (my favorite), knew to respect and partner with equally excellent engineers. In Sullivan's case that was Dankmar Adler.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@claudiadarling9441 Peters saved FL Wright's ass many times
@rheinhartsilvento2576
@rheinhartsilvento2576 Жыл бұрын
Yes. And it also saw a divorce of the design, which became a purely ego-based, mental/visual-based design from any connection with actual lived experience and space that was meant to serve its inhabitants. It's truly striking.
@brunodesrosiers266
@brunodesrosiers266 Жыл бұрын
The ignorance that drives those comments, as if the calamities described never occurred before. And secondly, as if architecture was the culprit.
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@brunodesrosiers266 not the architecture. the architect. who was egotistical. dishonest. corrupt. and a liar. yes he was a genius with his art, but completely immoral.
@Domi.1978
@Domi.1978 Жыл бұрын
Increíble monumento.
@lpzgrv2010
@lpzgrv2010 Ай бұрын
When a contractor tells you he would not build a house in the area you want to use, you really need to listen. I have visited the Farnsworth House and the contractor was totally right.
@TheReverb1
@TheReverb1 Жыл бұрын
All the famous houses by all these modern Architects exceeded the intended budgets. Always.
@didierduplenne2325
@didierduplenne2325 Жыл бұрын
If it were built now, all those terrible technical drawbacks would be solved. Still a dream house !
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
never as a house. a pavilion, ok. and move it out of the fld plane please
@billolsen4360
@billolsen4360 Жыл бұрын
Those terrible drawbacks would be solved today if your architect and builder were on their toes!
@justthink5854
@justthink5854 Жыл бұрын
@@billolsen4360 this statement, even if built today with triple pane low e glass would be a disaster. it's a great sculpture and pavilion. never a home
@danilochannel
@danilochannel Жыл бұрын
I totally agree. My dream house too.
@mikexhotmail
@mikexhotmail Жыл бұрын
Just add adequate active ventilation system and call it a day.
@mark_u
@mark_u Жыл бұрын
Great video! I hit the like button to help it get picked up by the algorithm. Cheers!
@Barchetta
@Barchetta Жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@user-tt5xj5ib1e
@user-tt5xj5ib1e Жыл бұрын
Sometimes great architects are simply bad business people ..... I feel sorry for the clients ...... 🤔😐
@ggc7318
@ggc7318 Жыл бұрын
Well, I still love ❤️ this house.
@LillyKC23
@LillyKC23 Жыл бұрын
What happens is the architect ends up building their vision at the client's expense. Plus they walk away with an exorbitant fee. If the design fails, oh well - it's art!
@anthonyxuereb792
@anthonyxuereb792 10 ай бұрын
Or.....if the design fails it's too bad, see ya.
@rawbacon
@rawbacon Жыл бұрын
Great Architecture = Unlivable Dump......People are always convinced they want an open floor plan until they spend time in a house that has intriguing and different zones in it.
@danieldonaldson8634
@danieldonaldson8634 Жыл бұрын
6:30 : it can't have helped Mies in his quest to learn the flooding history of the site, that the Illinois State Water Authority apparently kept their records in Russian. It's like Ayn Rand must have thought, "who are the biggest, most self-regarding, socially useless non-contributing group of people with a permanent sense of their own importance who make life miserable for the greatest number of people, so I can make one the hero of a shitty book". And then all the people in that profession thought, "since I'm a sociopath anyway, what can I read that's basically about my absolute worst impulses, that would aggravate my complete lack of integrity""? It's worth noting that Van Der Rohe lived in a big masonry and small windowed apartment in an old building until his death.
@gnarbeljo8980
@gnarbeljo8980 Жыл бұрын
Great video. Respectfully though it's not "Van de Row", but "Mees Fun de Ro-heh".
@PomaleeDon
@PomaleeDon Жыл бұрын
Play-no. Plano, Illinois. 👍🏻
@avjake
@avjake Жыл бұрын
Just curious why there is Russian writing on the file folders shown at 6:28. Was Illinois under siege at the time?
@georgewashington3164
@georgewashington3164 Жыл бұрын
How to spend enormous amount of money and get an aquarium.
@sheilbwright7649
@sheilbwright7649 Жыл бұрын
Seems good but too many ads.
@claygirl0
@claygirl0 Жыл бұрын
I've lived down the street from this house my entire life and I've never been there myself, but I hope to get there soon!
@JPKnapp-ro6xm
@JPKnapp-ro6xm Жыл бұрын
Mies van der Rohe was a disgrace to his profession. If an architect builds the most beautiful building in the world (however you define beautiful) but it doesn't function, then it is a FAILURE. Such people should not be allowed to practice as architects, the same as a surgeon who is repeatedly botching his operations has his license revoked. If you only care about how something looks, become a sculptor.
@johnbarker5009
@johnbarker5009 Жыл бұрын
Interesting that "the Illinois State Water Survey" labels its files in Russian, at least in this video.
@thesongbird2383
@thesongbird2383 Жыл бұрын
Architects often lack sensible practibility. 🤔 They're often very creative, and that draws us in.
@jeebanjeeban87
@jeebanjeeban87 Жыл бұрын
it still inspires today... to listen... to my client and their wallet errr.... budget. just an architect passing by ☺😊
@edwardolson8996
@edwardolson8996 2 ай бұрын
It seems to me that this house is a grand piece of sculpture, and that that is true for many grand buildings. Was Mies a sculptor as much as an architect?
@swoondrones
@swoondrones Жыл бұрын
I didn't know PJ's Glass House was before this.
@user-lp2he1md6i
@user-lp2he1md6i Жыл бұрын
To get a home for less than 200k in America is rare especially if your building it BRAND NEW
@fosbury68
@fosbury68 16 күн бұрын
6:26 Why are the Illinois state Water Survey records in Russian?
@gj8683
@gj8683 Жыл бұрын
van der Rohe was a perfectionist, but this shows how that mindset can lead to serious problems,
@harperwelch5147
@harperwelch5147 Жыл бұрын
Virtually every innovation takes some risks. Almost all of Frank Lloyd Wright’s buildings had problems, leaks, structural failures, etc. New ideas means taking risks to produce something unique. A glass house sits in clear elegant contrast to its landscape which is the art on the glass walls. This is a house which takes marvelous risks and wins the race!
@anthonyxuereb792
@anthonyxuereb792 10 ай бұрын
If they have to temporarily relocate the house to install the hydraulic lift wouldn't it better to relocate it permanently somewhere on the property safe from flooding, stupid to have to raise it in the event of serious flooding, that isn't in keeping with the design of the house and Ms Farnsworth did want it further away from the river.
@RIXRADvidz
@RIXRADvidz Жыл бұрын
6:28, Russian Stock Footage, the Illinois State Water Board would not use Cyrillic lettering in their files. VOID
@cookoutdoor881
@cookoutdoor881 Жыл бұрын
She didn’t commissioned a house, she challenged a whole series of boundaries without realizing it. She called a famous architect… and this is what she got. If she would call a local builder to design and build the house, with her brief or leaving the builder to decide, she may had got a financially tolerable, operationally workable and finally livable and happy home. But then who would know for it…. How many talks would have been around it? She didn’t live the day, she challenged the day…
@rcajavus8141
@rcajavus8141 Жыл бұрын
you are an architect? first thing for architect is to swallow his ego and work FOR the client. If a woman came to bakery and said "I WANT A BIG CAKE", would a baker simply start baking an MtEverest sized cake or should he ask "how big cake do you want, you know we cant transport it if its bigger than 300 kg"...its called being professional, knowing how to simply meet clients needs and not use/abuse clients ignorance/naivete
@cookoutdoor881
@cookoutdoor881 Жыл бұрын
@@rcajavus8141 A precisely revealing phrase: use/abuse clients ignorance/naïveté. In your example, the customer met a baker who had a dream to make a Mount Everest sized cake and was looking for someone to order it and finance it. Un-asked and Un-answered practical or functional matters were supposedly asked and answered, as client assumed a great architect would solve them and architect assumed a brave and visionary owner would tolerate.
@rogermccaslin5963
@rogermccaslin5963 Жыл бұрын
@@cookoutdoor881 But when presented with a modest budget, the baker would realize you can't make a Mt Everest sized cake with a cupcake wallet. Mr. Mies apparently ignored budgetary constraints.
@pbxn-3rdx-85percent
@pbxn-3rdx-85percent Жыл бұрын
If Scotty Kilmer is a building contractor and not an auto mechanic, he would still declare this Farnsworth House is "a bottomless MONEY PIT! Ha ha ha!" (insert laughing donkey head here).
@rogermccaslin5963
@rogermccaslin5963 Жыл бұрын
Yes, but would he tell the owner to buy a Corolla instead? 🤔😁
@marshall1864
@marshall1864 Жыл бұрын
People are who. "An architect who," not "an architect that."
@wiesejay
@wiesejay Жыл бұрын
It’s groin-grabbingly transcendent
@Sofian375
@Sofian375 Жыл бұрын
"For the sake of style"
@Wkkbooks
@Wkkbooks Жыл бұрын
What's so great about having no interior beams? Why not a house without a floor, or a roof?
@robertholtz
@robertholtz Жыл бұрын
Great video but you butchered practically every proper name you mentioned.
@georgejamesducas9602
@georgejamesducas9602 Жыл бұрын
I've been there when pulumbo let me in, at that time nobody was allowed in
@mikexhotmail
@mikexhotmail Жыл бұрын
I prefer this wonderful failure all day any day over anything else. ^_^
@michaeljarosz4062
@michaeljarosz4062 Жыл бұрын
Curious: At the part of the video where he searched the state flood records, the folders are titled in Russian. Could this video be fleshed out with stock footage?
@m.b.calderhead268
@m.b.calderhead268 Жыл бұрын
@Michael Jarosz…yes, I noticed that immediately. Folders in Russian???? Why not just insert your own photo of files in a filing cabinet if one needed this shot at all. Overall, I thought the presentation was good. It’s a great looking house, but, because of a myriad of man-made problems, in the end, it didn’t serve the client’s needs at all….just the opposite. Do you think it was a matter of a lack of being able to communicate with each other or was Mies impossible? I would like to know how his other buildings fared especially the SEAGRAM BUILDING.
@nemo227
@nemo227 Жыл бұрын
The "best laid plans . . . "are sometimes NOT the best plans. When YOU are paying . . . trust your own judgement.
@MichaelTavel
@MichaelTavel Жыл бұрын
Interesting how the Illinois State Water Survey was recorded entirely in Russian. Who knew!
@DerCharacter
@DerCharacter Жыл бұрын
The real disaster is trying to build the Lego version of it, who decided to make you place dozens of 1x1 tiles?? I guess it makes sense because you have to put the furniture in there and the interior and exterior floors are consistent, but it was a bit annoying.
@robert3302
@robert3302 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes, less is not enough.
@wiesejay
@wiesejay Жыл бұрын
I wonder how much Libeskind would charge to build me a bombastic eyesore
@siriosstar4789
@siriosstar4789 Жыл бұрын
ever hire an architect if you don't know what YOU want as you will be talked into a design that the architect has been dreaming about . i've had four houses built in my life , all of which were my designs . an architect was hired only because it was required. They all dislike me to this day as i rejected almost all of their suggestions . 😆🤣
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