By: Associated Press//January 28, 2020//
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — The architecture school that the famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright started nearly 90 years ago is closing, officials announced Tuesday.
The School of Architecture at Taliesin, which encompasses Wright properties in Wisconsin and Arizona, will be closed in June. The school’s governing board said in a statement the “gut-wrenching decision” was made after no agreement could be made with the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation to keep the school operating. Specific details about the negotiations between the school and foundation were not disclosed.
“This is a sad and somber day for our school, our students and staff and the architecture community,” said Dan Schweiker, chairperson of the Board of Governors.
The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, which is a separate entity, said in its own statement that the school did not have a sound business plan. The boards of both organizations had come up with a proposal to keep the school going through the end of July 2021. The foundation would have donated the use of Taliesin and Taliesin West to the school. But the school’s board didn’t unanimously approve the plan, a decision that left the foundation’s board “disappointed.”
“We continue to stand ready to assist in making sure that this change occurs in the best interests of the students,” said Stuart Graff, foundation president and CEO.
Wright started the architecture school in 1932. He and his young apprentices would split their time between Taliesin in Spring Green, Wisconsin and Taliesin West in Scottsdale, Arizona.
The school has 30 students. It will remain open for the spring semester. School officials say they are working on an agreement with Arizona State University’s design school to allow those students’ credits to transfer.
Until Wright’s death in 1959 at age 91, Taliesin West was the famed architect’s winter home and laboratory. The original Taliesin, Wright’s primary home in Spring Green, was named after a 6th century Welsh bard whose name means “shining brow.”
Both retreats were among eight Wright-designed buildings recognized as UNESCO World Heritage sites in July.