The reblogging action for:
Monkfish Jowls
From unbuilt, a cool looking tumblr of buildings designed but never built. 
unbuilt:

THE MILE HIGH ILLINOIS
Proposal.
Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright / Date: 1956 / Location: Chicago.
When asked to design a hypothetical television tower a mile high,  Wright opted to turn a mere antenna into a building, proposing a  528-floor structure that would house  all Illinois state government  offices and consolidate commercial, governmental, and civic functions.
The facade tapers as the building rises, exposing the elevator  cores to offer landscape views to those racing to the top, a trip  designed to take only sixty seconds.
Given Wright’s disdain for crowded cities, an enormous  skyscraper might seem like an odd project for the architect. But he  viewed the idea as “a necessary step”  toward the decentralization that  his Broadacre City plan would bring.
He explained, “The Mile High would absorb, justify, and  legitimatize the gregarious instinct of humanity … and would mop up  what now remains of urbanism.”  Employees working in the Mile High are  surrounded by green space rather than the typical mob of towers and are  freed from overcrowding, pollution, and traffic as cars and helicopters  transport them easily into the natural landscape.
Wright’s colossus, which reflects an ambition to build higher  and higher that’s as old as the Tower of Babel, continues to challenge  architects contemplating high-rise buildings in urban environments.
(Words from here)

From unbuilt, a cool looking tumblr of buildings designed but never built. 

unbuilt:

THE MILE HIGH ILLINOIS

Proposal.

Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright / Date: 1956 / Location: Chicago.

When asked to design a hypothetical television tower a mile high, Wright opted to turn a mere antenna into a building, proposing a 528-floor structure that would house all Illinois state government offices and consolidate commercial, governmental, and civic functions.

The facade tapers as the building rises, exposing the elevator cores to offer landscape views to those racing to the top, a trip designed to take only sixty seconds.

Given Wright’s disdain for crowded cities, an enormous skyscraper might seem like an odd project for the architect. But he viewed the idea as “a necessary step” toward the decentralization that his Broadacre City plan would bring.

He explained, “The Mile High would absorb, justify, and legitimatize the gregarious instinct of humanity … and would mop up what now remains of urbanism.” Employees working in the Mile High are surrounded by green space rather than the typical mob of towers and are freed from overcrowding, pollution, and traffic as cars and helicopters transport them easily into the natural landscape.

Wright’s colossus, which reflects an ambition to build higher and higher that’s as old as the Tower of Babel, continues to challenge architects contemplating high-rise buildings in urban environments.

(Words from here)

  1. forfelawar reblogged this from unbuilt
  2. cirennis reblogged this from unbuilt
  3. liefujishiro reblogged this from sandman-kk
  4. sandman-kk reblogged this from redhousecanada and added:
    frank lloyd wright always ahead of the game THE MILE HIGH ILLINOIS Proposal....Frank Lloyd...
  5. redhousecanada reblogged this from not2cad
  6. seekercranny reblogged this from unbuilt
  7. not2cad reblogged this from uekou77 and added:
    frank lloyd wright always ahead
  8. fxjz reblogged this from unbuilt and added:
    This almost looks
  9. nightsabyss reblogged this from unbuilt
  10. junkfabulous reblogged this from unbuilt
  11. bumpycircle reblogged this from unbuilt
  12. contemplatrium reblogged this from unbuilt
  13. teaches-peaches reblogged this from bittergrapes
  14. bittergrapes reblogged this from unbuilt
  15. words-akimbo reblogged this from unbuilt
  16. This was featured in #Architecture
  17. unbuilt posted this
Search
Navigate
Archive

Text, photographs, quotes, links, conversations, audio and visual material preserved for future reference.