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The Art of the Motorcycle was an exhibition that presented 114 [8] motorcycles chosen for their historic importance or design excellence [9] in a display designed by Frank Gehry in the curved rotunda of the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City, running for three months in late 1998.
New York City Fire Museum: SoHo: Manhattan: Firefighting: Historical and modern firefighting vehicles, equipment, uniforms New York City Police Museum: Financial District: Manhattan: Law enforcement: Closed in 2014, plans unclear Harbor Defense Museum: Bay Ridge: Brooklyn Military Located in Fort Hamilton, 19th-century fort with exhibits of NY ...
Frank Lloyd Wright Jr., known as Lloyd Wright (1890–1978), became a notable architect in Los Angeles. Lloyd's son, Eric Lloyd Wright (1929–2023), was an architect in Malibu, California , specializing in residences, but also designed civic and commercial buildings.
On Lake Mahopac in the Lower Hudson Valley is a local hidden gem. Petra Island is home to an architectural work of art inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright.
Frank Lloyd Wright designed 1,141 ... Universal Portland Cement Company New York City Exhibition: 1004: S.163: New York: New York: 1910: 1910: Temporary structure ...
The Hoffman Auto Showroom was an automobile dealership at 430 Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, New York City. Designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright for notable European importer Max Hoffman in 1954, the glass and steel 3,600-square-foot (330 m 2) space was located on the ground floor of an office tower located between East 55th and 56th ...
In 2009, a Frank Lloyd Wright retrospective attracted 372,000 visitors in three months, becoming the museum's single most popular exhibit. [403] This record was broken the next year by a Kandinsky exhibit.
Broadacre City was an urban or suburban development concept proposed by Frank Lloyd Wright throughout most of his lifetime. He presented the idea in his book The Disappearing City in 1932. A few years later he unveiled a very detailed twelve-by-twelve-foot (3.7 × 3.7 m) scale model representing a hypothetical four-square-mile (10 km 2 ) community.