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Usonia homes in Mount Pleasant blend with nature

By SWAPNA VENUGOPAL RAMASWAMY
THE JOURNAL NEWS

(Original Publication: May 5, 2007)



If you go



MOUNT PLEASANT — Off narrow, serpentine roads, rust-colored homes on circular sites perch atop hills, drawing nature inside with their long walls of windows.

There are 47 homes on about 100 tranquil acres that blur the indoor/outdoor lines in this utopian community known as Usonia that was inspired by the vision of famed American architect Frank Lloyd Wright.

When Johanna Cooper and her husband, Marvin, bought into Usonia in 1971, the couple had no clue of its extraordinary origins. Instead, they were purchasing a house that they knew -the cypress and stone structure had belonged to Johanna's brother -and one they felt strongly drawn to.

"We adored the natural setting, loved the house and the spaces it encompassed," said Johanna Cooper, who was 34 when she came to Usonia. "It just spoke to us."

After completing his fellowship in hematology in Salt Lake City, Marvin Cooper would take a job at Columbia University and the couple would raise their three children in the Mount Pleasant house.

It wasn't until later that the Coopers learned of Usonia's connection to Wright.

"Then it unfolded, this incredible history," Johanna Cooper said.

That revelation was the inspiration and subject of her 1986 master's thesis in anthropology at Columbia University, and now, an exhibition that she has curated titled "Frank Lloyd Wright and Usonia: An Experiment in Living." It opens today and runs through June 24 at The Studio in Armonk.

The retrospective includes archival documents and audio portraying the genesis of this radical-for-its-time community.

"The project was the brainchild of David Hencken, a New York engineer, who saw an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art detailing Frank Lloyd Wright's proposal for a cooperative community with affordable single-family homes for middle-class Americans," said Roland Reisley, 83, one of the founding members of Usonia and the community's de facto historian.

Wright used the term "usonian" to describe houses that were to have a strong connection with nature, echoing the forms of the land and using natural materials such as wood, glass, stone or other masonry. In a word, organic, Johanna Cooper said.

Hencken, along with a group of idealistic families who dreamed of a modernist, alternative lifestyle, collectively bought 97 acres in 1947 for $23,000, she said.

Three of the houses were designed by Wright himself, including Reisley's. The rest were designed by architects who were Wright's students.

"According to the initial advertisements, homes were to cost $10,000 to $30,000," Cooper said.

But with the cost of labor and materials rising, and the challenge of building new, innovative designs with inexperienced builders, expenses mounted. One home designed by Wright ended up at $85,000.

Despite all the problems, or because of them, the community started seeing itself as an extended family, with three get-togethers a year that continue to this day, Cooper said.

"They felt they had to defend themselves from people who thought of them as radical and with very liberal tendencies," she said. "Even obtaining mortgages from banks was difficult for these unusual homes with circular plots."

Of the 47 original owners, seven of the families still live in the community and another five have passed on homes to the next generation, said Reisley, a retired physicist.

"It was a bonding experience for people living here," Reisley said. "But people who didn't buy into it thought of it as 'insania.'"

Cooper's house, designed by Kaneji Domoto, has an oak tree that goes through its deck.

"It's almost as if the house were built around it," she said. "It is a symbolic design that suggests that houses can live harmoniously with nature."

The reverence for nature that Wright espoused is what attracted many to the community. Given today's concerns with sustainability, as well as organic sensibilities, one can see that Wright was a visionary, Cooper said.

"Wright was one of the earliest environmentalists," she said.


 

 

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