Bartlesville Arts center offers Frank Lloyd Wright for the night
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) _ For visitors who really want to linger in architect Frank Lloyd Wright's tallest building, there will soon be beds. <br><br>A 21-room boutique hotel is scheduled to open
Wednesday, January 15th 2003, 12:00 am
By: News On 6
BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP) _ For visitors who really want to linger in architect Frank Lloyd Wright's tallest building, there will soon be beds.
A 21-room boutique hotel is scheduled to open early March inside the Price Tower, whose 19 stories Wright designed for New York City but realized only on the prairie of this northeast Oklahoma oil town.
Floors that once sat paint-peeling and abandoned are being sleekly transformed. There's a new restaurant with sweeping views.
But for enthusiasts of Wright's pioneering work, the real amenity is simply the chance to stay.
``It's like living in a museum,'' says John Womack, an Oklahoma State University architecture professor who's eagerly awaiting an overnight visit.
The Price Tower is the only manifestation of Wright's ideas of what an urban high-rise should be.
He originally proposed it in 1929 as a Manhattan apartment building, but it wasn't built until the H.C. Price pipeline company asked Wright to design its new headquarters nearly 25 years later.
Wright called the tower ``a tree that escaped the crowded forest.'' He gave it cantilevered floors for limbs and covered it in green copper blades. Inside, walls stand at angles, windows open to the outside air and elevators are as small as telephone booths.
``It's not the plain old glass box piled on a glass box,'' says admirer James Goulka, the president of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation in Scottsdale, Ariz.
The Price Tower is not the only high-rise sprouting from the plains of this city of 34,000; the longtime presence of Phillips Petroleum Co. ensured that.
A decade after the Price company dissolved, though, the tower sat abandoned and in disrepair.
Looking at all those empty floors and the Wright fans who kept coming, the new caretaker, a local non-profit arts group, decided a hotel was one way to give the tower a future.
``And you couldn't have a Motel 6 interior,'' says Richard Townsend, executive director of the Price Tower Arts Center. ``You had to design something that was unique, appropriate, hip.''
With Phillips donating the building and refurbishing and with another $5 million in fund-raising, the arts center commissioned New York architect Wendy Evans Joseph to create the Inn at Price Tower.
The group's mandate: No alterations to structural walls and no ``Fake Lloyd Wright.''
The center, Townsend says, wanted something distinct that worked with Wright's design, not a copycat.
Joseph drew on the tree theme in designing strong-lined furnishings of maple and copper pipe, leaf-themed murals and rugs made in Tibet and Indiana in soft oranges and greens. Because of the narrow elevators, the furniture had to be constructed on the spot, room-by-room.
``It required humility,'' Joseph said. ``It demanded of us a complete understanding of Wright's intentions and a respect for the quality and consistency of his work, while at the same time requiring us to crate a parallel design path with a texture of its own.''
Enthusiasts like Goulka and Womack have no problems with the modifications, saying the slight changes allow the building to be saved and used.
Peering out through a wall of windows at the rolling Osage Hills, Townsend talks of the tower as a cultural tourist destination, offering the art center's exhibits on the first two floors, guided tours of Wright's original interiors on the upper floors, classes, a meal at the restaurant and a stay in Joseph's rooms.
``People thirst for authenticity, unique experiences,'' he says, waving his hands toward the golden stretch of plains. ``I can't imagine you can find this anywhere else.''
Rooms at Inn at Price Tower will range from $125 a night to the $250 a night split-level suite. The inn will be operated by Dallas-based Culinaire International.
Townsend suggests architectural tourists might also take in the local creations of Wright's student, Bruce Goff. Another student, William Wesley Peters, designed the community center across the street. And Tulsa's art deco architecture is about a 45-minute drive away.
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