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This massive red brick and concrete building would be impressive in any
setting; it is especially so in the small Wisconsin town where Wright was
born. Designed in 1915 and constructed between 1917 and 1921 for a local
commodity wholesaler, Albert Dell German, the four-story warehouse was
subsequently used to store sugar, flour, coffee, tobacco and other staples.
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More recently, it was modified to accommodate a gift shop and small theater
on the first floor, and an exhibition of large photo murals which illustrate
Wright's architectural work on the second floor.
The Warehouse is one of only a few major public buildings designed by Wright
during the midteens that was actually constructed. With the demolition
of his Midway Gardens in Chicago and the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, it has
become the only extant example from that decade in which he employed sculptural
ornamentation so extensively. The elaborate cast concrete frieze of repeated
geometric motifs surrounding the upper portion of the The Warehouse foreshadows
Wright's even more extensive integration of structure and ornament in the
concrete block residences he designed in the 1920's.
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Address
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300 South Church Street, Richland Center, Wisconsin
53581
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Days and hours
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Call for tour information -
Reservations are required
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Admission
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Call for tour information
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Information
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(608) 647-2808 (Warehouse Office)
Area Information
(800) 422-1318 (Chamber of Commerce)
Please mention this Internet as your source
for these numbers.
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Sites | Events | Resources | Links |
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Send comments, corrections, and suggestions to info@WrightInWisconsin.org
© 2001 Frank Lloyd Wright® Wisconsin Heritage Tourism Program, Inc.,
All Rights Reserved. Legal Terms and Notices
Phone: (608) 287-0339, Fax: (608) 287-0764 |
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