Sometimes, it takes experience to truly see what’s been in front of you all along. I’ve read about Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style before. His long horizontal lines, deep eaves, and bold ideas about space I had understood only in theory. But when I finally got to visit his buildings in Chicago and Oak Park, especially the Robie House, it all started to make sense in a whole new way. The way those big eaves block the harsh summer sun while still letting in soft, natural light—it’s not just clever, it’s thoughtful. You can really feel how his designs respond to the local climate and way of life, not just trends or theory. Since I work in construction, I couldn’t help but notice the small stuff too. As someone works in construction, I was especially struck by how carefully things were built, how materials were joined, how precise it all felt. Before, those were just words in a textbook. But standing there, walking through the space, it felt real. That moment reminded me: understanding something deeply sometimes takes more than studying it. You must see it, feel it, and walk through it. -Sohei
| Discovering Wright’s Prairie Vision at Robie House |
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