A Boathouse Rises From The Water's Edge

A Boathouse Rises From The Water's Edge

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The other day someone asked me when the 1905 designed Frank Lloyd Wright Boathouse was going to get started. I responded that the project was well underway, and by way of appearance the structure was quickly taking shape. As a matter of fact, when I stopped down to take a look on Saturday there were already people walking around the premise taking photos. The FLW telltale signature designed overhangs cast shadows over the parking lot as the sound of the water permeated the air.

There are a series of construction photos on the Wright Boathouse website to see details of the progress. There is something very serene about the building... it's very unusual to see the modern FLW lines against the picturesque blues of Lake Erie. It's so exciting to see the dreams of a few West Side Rowing Club members becoming a reality. The boathouse was originally researched by President, Ted Marks, who was a FLW enthusiast and felt that the plans deserved a fitting finale on the shores of Lake Erie along the Black Rock Channel.

Since the idea was originally researched in 2000, the 4960 sq.' building continually rises and will soon house the country's largest rowing club (WSRC founded in 1912). The design for the boathouse was, back in 1905, conceived with the prompting of a University if Wisconsin student who yearned to have an original FLW design at their rowing club's disposal. The plans lay dormant for many years until a visionary by the name of Ted Marks put the plans into motion.

"In 1909, Wright traveled to Europe to work on his Wasmuth portfolio. For this portfolio, Wright selected his best works and included the boathouse in his design." - The Waterline

That portfolio eventually ended up in front of many of the top world architects of the time.

feed your soul buffalo

What Others Have To Say

  1. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 16:18

    They could have hired an up and coming architect of our era to design a better boathouse designed specifically for our city, our time period and the needs of this rowing club . I see this as a missed opportunity but I'm not exactly a "FLW enthusiast".

  2. Keith

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 17:20

    Davvid wrote: "... I'm not exactly a "FLW enthusiast"

    Then why did you feel the need to write a comment? A lot of people put a lot of work into this and it is looking good.

  3. STEEL

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 18:15

    Hmmm, looks interesting but was the original intended to be made with precast concrete? My suspicions say not.

  4. chris69

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 18:38

    Why was this building so expensive....it looks like its going up very easily and quickly....especially with its poured concrete walls. I thought there were going to be FLW designs in the concrete or FLW tiles.....but while its attractive...it doesnt strike me as having the expensive FLW details that made it wait all these years and cost so much money.

    NOW CAN WE MOVE ONTO REBUILDING THE LARKIN ADMINISTRATION BUILDING?

  5. allthingsbuffalo

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 18:48

    just so you know...FLW purists like jack quinan think projects like this are stupid. it is kinda cool to expand our FLW portfolio but at the sametime, these arent the same materials FLW would use and whose to say he would design the boathouse like this if he was asked to design it for that location....and whose to say blue sky masoleum would look that way if he was told it be for random people of the public to be buried in and not the martin family.

    sorry im just saying.

    i do think its pretty interesting though. buffalo has definitely pushed the FLW connection for marketing us lately and its working with the martin house, blue sky, and now this.

  6. dpbflo

    3 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 19:01

    Im a huge FLW enthusiast and even if I wasnt im glad to see all of the development in our great city. amen.

  7. impressingagent

    3 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 19:24

    why do so many people complain? it looks nice

  8. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 19:30

    What is missing as Buffalo aligns itself with the work of FLW is a very serious and pecise discussion of:

    - the relevance of Wright's work.

    - authenticity, authorship and posthumous construction

    - the ethics of architourism

    (perhaps some other topics as well)

    This is not the best forum in which to have that detailed discussion but it should happen somewhere. Without that type of rigorous assement of our own inentions we might end up doing very stupid things with alot of money. Maybe I am wrong but I think an informed discussion wouldn't hurt.

    STEEL, am I way off base with all of this?

  9. skarnath

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 21:01

    an impressive project, and another example of what's possible with bisonvision & persistence. national & international interest in all things Wright continues to grow, not wane. wright frequently included the boathouse in portfolios of his major works. that the FLW foundation would authorize its construction in buffalo should be a source of great local pride. kudos to ted marks & the board of the FLWRBC, to the architects (tony puttnam & ted lownie) & to sharon courtin & her staff. check out their website for a more thorough discussion of the issues of authenticity and posthumous construction. and best of all - it's going to be a working boathouse for the oldest rowing club in america. hard to find a downside to this project...

  10. MisterChips

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 22:34

    If the Frank Lloyd Wright people (foundation? heirs?) disapproved of posthumous constructions of unbuilt designs, they wouldn't license those unbuilt designs. I'm looking at the FLW boathouse website now and I don't see any discussion of posthumous construction. Am I missing somethng?

  11. davvid

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 25th 2007, 22:58

    skarnath, I'm not finding any critical discussion on www.wrightsboathouse.org. Is there another website?

    I'm finding rhetoric. "In addition to being a working boathouse the building will be accessible to architectural tourists who desire to tour this building and experience its authentic spaces."

    A serious discussion would include experts that do not stand to gain or lose a lot from the project.

    "national & international interest in all things Wright continues to grow, not wane." This reads like it was learned from a focus group study and fed to a board of directors. Do we want "focus group" urbanism?

    These issues are serious because they affect the integrity of Buffalo's architectural heritage.

  12. STEEL

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 00:00

    One thing I like very much about this building is how it engages the water edge. It is not just a building sitting nect to the water. It actually becomes the water edge. There are too few examples in Buffalo where the architecture melds with the landscape and the surroundings in general.

  13. skarnath

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 01:24

    i agree the subject of posthumous construction is a serious, and controversial, subject. puttnam's interview on the boathouse website reminded me of the fred bernstein article that ran in the ny times, which i believe the buffalo news reprinted. puttnam believes wright would have strongly supported the construction of the boathouse, and his opinion is entitled to considerable weight. good design is timeless - it doesn't matter when a great building is built, and it shouldn't matter if there is a gap in time between design & construction. and we're not kidnapping this design from another city - it was never built. the bottom line is there is an appropriate (or perhaps perfect) end user for this building, & that end user wants this building and has raised the money to build it. and despite what any of us think is good, bad or appropriate, there are tens, perhaps hundreds of thousands of people who will travel to buffalo over the next century to see this boathouse. it's called voting with your feet, and your wallet.

  14. Charger

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 07:46

    Well said skarnath. This really seems to me like a time the critics should tone down their rhetoric and think about finding another subject. This is a relatively small building with relatively small public sector involvement. If a bunch of people want to build this to further what they see is important goals (rowing and architourism) then let them do it and get out of the way. They're actually doing it, which should be a relief to all the BRO readers who constantly lament the fact that nothing happens fast enough for them on the development front.

  15. icecreamsub

    3 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 07:48

    This looks great. Thank god they gave up on trying to build a new bridge and did this instead. I’m looking forward to the new FLW elephant house at the Buffalo Zoo

  16. Matthewjohnp

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 11:23

    It looks like a WWII Nazi Bunker…I can almost make out the resistance forces rising up from the polluted waters, one well placed grenade would fix that mess.

  17. Chief_Psychic

    2 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 11:45

    This will be a great addition to our neglected waterfront. It is a significant improvement over the current WSRC facilities!

    I am so happy to see progress and positive development! It is about time that we see something progress beyond the discuss and bitch stage.

  18. emilie

    4 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 12:01

    Whether or not the design agrees with your personal taste is pretty irrelevant. The people at West Side actually took the iniative to build something new and different on the waterfront instead of just talking about it. Better yet, it will actually go to good use, and be utilized by a vibrant and successful rowing club. I can't think of a better Buffalo success story than that!

  19. UrbanMatt2000

    1 ratings12345
    Jun 26th 2007, 21:59

    I agree with Chief Psychic, emilie and the like: As usual the Buffalo Naysayers are quick to put down any idea that isn't ideal (in their views at least). I'll take a FLW boathouse-- be it of concrete, mud, whatever-- over traditional bflo/erie projects like the 33, main st closure, etc, any day! Progress is progress. We're moving beyond strategizing about what people may want/ what may bring people downtown to building for what is already asked for.

  20. Sal

    0 ratings12345
    Jun 27th 2007, 07:26

    It's a cool idea to take these dormant plans and build them out. Having completed the adult learn to row class at the West Side Rowing Club a few years ago, I remember their building as being un-inspired. Hopefully the FLW-designed gas station will be built also.

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