Frank Lloyd Wright’s unbuilt Pittsburgh comes to life

A new exhibit opening Friday reimagines Pittsburgh through Frank Lloyd Wright’s unbuilt designs, revealing how the city may have looked if his ambitious plans had come to life.

The intrigue: “Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania” features Wright’s unrealized vision for Pittsburgh through animated videos and 3D models of his 1940s and ’50s designs.

  • Animations by Oklahoma-based Skyline Ink revive Wright’s polished postwar plan for The Point — a colossal 10-story civic center housing a 15,000-seat concert garden, zoo, aquarium, opera house, sports arena and more.
  • City leaders deemed it too costly and oversized, eventually opting to build Point State Park and the Lower Hill District’s Civic Arena instead.
  • Other works in the exhibit include a self-service garage for Kaufmann’s department store and Pointview Residences, a high-rise apartment tower on Mount Washington.

The big picture: The exhibit, which has traveled across Pennsylvania to Washington, D.C., runs through May at Downtown’s 820 Liberty Gallery in partnership with the Westmoreland Museum of American Art, Fallingwater and the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust.

Context: The Kaufmann family, famed for their Downtown department store and for hiring Wright to design Fallingwater, commissioned many of the projects on display.

  • It was part of a larger effort to reimagine a more sustainable, civic-minded Pittsburgh after decades of industrial growth, Scott Perkins, the show’s curator and senior director of preservation and collections at Fallingwater, tells Axios.

Between the lines: The designs join decades of enterprising but shelved plans for Pittsburgh, from a futuristic stadium once proposed on the Monongahela River to zip lines from Mount Washington to the North Shore…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS