Farnsworth House Floor Plan

    farnsworth house

  • The Farnsworth House, was designed and constructed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe between 1945-51. It is a one-room weekend retreat in a once-rural setting, located southwest of Chicago’s downtown on a estate site, adjoining the Fox River, south of the city of Plano, Illinois.

    floor plan

  • (Floor planning) Floorplanning is the act of designing of a floorplan, which is a kind of bird’s-eye view of a structure.
  • In architecture and building engineering, a floor plan, or floorplan, is a diagram, usually to scale, showing the relationships between rooms, spaces and other physical features at one level of a structure.
  • A scale diagram of the arrangement of rooms in one story of a building
  • scale drawing of a horizontal section through a building at a given level; contrasts with elevation

farnsworth house floor plan

farnsworth house floor plan – Mies van

Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House
Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House
Photographer Paul Clemence celebrates a revered icon of modern architecture, the Farnsworth House, located near Plano, Illinois. This is the only private residence designed by famed modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Striking architetural details are captured in over 70 eye-catching color and black-and-white photographs and drawings. A Foreword by Dirk Lohan poetically reveals the essence of this architectural masterpiece, built in 1951. This book is a must-have for devotees of architecture, design, Modernism, the Bauhaus, Mies van der Rohe, and photography.

Austin – Texas State Capitol: Capitol Extension – Seal Reverse

Austin - Texas State Capitol: Capitol Extension - Seal Reverse
The Reverse of the Texas State Seal was designed by Sarah R. Farnsworth, proposed by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas proposed, adopted by the Fifty-Seventh Legislature and approved by Governor Price Daniel in 1961. The Seventy-Second Legislature modified the reerse of the state seal in 1991. The seal consists of a shield, the lower half of which is divided into two parts–on the lower left is a depiction of the cannon of the Battle of Gonzales and on the lower right is a depiction of Vince’s Bridge. On the upper half of the shield is a depiction of the Alamo. The shield is circled by live oak and olive branches, and the unfurled flags of the Kingdom of France, the Kingdom of Spain, the United Mexican States, the Republic of Texas, the Confederate States of America, and the United States of America. Above the shield is emblazoned the motto, "Remember the Alamo", and beneath are the words, "Texas One and Indivisible." Vver the entire shield, centered between the flags, is a white five-pointed star.

The underground Capitol Extension was built in 1993, doubling the square footage available for the Texas State Capitol. In order to preserve the facade and historic plaza, the extension was built as a four-story underground structure to the north. In addition to office spaces for Senate and House of Representatives members, the Extension also contains a bookstore, cafeteria, hearing rooms, auditorium and two levels of parking for Capitol staff.

The Texas State Capitol, anchoring 22-acres of landscaped grounds originally designated as Capitol Square in 1839, was designed in 1881 by architect Elijah E. Myers, and was constructed from 1882 to 1888 under the direction of civil engineer Reuben Lindsay Walker. The Italian Renaissance Revival seat of Texas state government houses the two the chambers of the Texas Legislature and the office of the governor.

The first Capitol structure on this site, a three-story limestone building from 1853, burned down in 1881. Myers’ plans for a replacement called for construction of Texas limestone, but concern about the quality resulted in the use of a distinctive Sunset Red Texas Granite fem Granite Mountain in Marble Falls, Burnet County. Covering 2.25 acres of ground with 8.5 acres of floor space, the building was said to be the seventh largest in the world at the time and is the largest state capitol in the country. Reaching a height of 302.64-feet, from the oval walk the tip of the Goddess of Liberty–a 15-foot, 7.5-inch zinc statue originally raised on February 26, 1888, and replaced with an aluminum duplicate in 1986, it was the tallest building in Texas for 35 years Austin’s tallest for 86 years (the longest of any building in any other city’s history) and stands 14.64-feet taller than the U.S. Capitol.

Farnsworth House Plans

Farnsworth House Plans
The Farnsworth House was built in 1951 in Plano, Illinois.

Top: Floor plan. Middle: Elevation. Bottom: Section.

farnsworth house floor plan

farnsworth house floor plan

Farnsworth House (Architecture in Detail)
The only residence built by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in America, Farnsworth House exemplifies both the central tenet of the International Style by inverting the conventions of traditional architecture, and of Mies’ own design philosophy as it had evolved over the preceding four decades. Commissioned by Dr Edith Farnsworth to be used as a weekend country retreat, the house was conceived by Mies as an envelope of glass and steel floating over the Illinois Fox River flood plain. Its spare interior – an integrated living space pared down to the last detail – was intended to enable a simpler, cleaner and healthier lifestyle. With detailed drawings and specially commissioned photography, this latest book in the award-winning “AiD” series provides an in-depth and richly illustrated account of this icon of twentieth-century Modernist architecture. It documents how, even before its completion in 1951, architect and client had fallen out over expenses and practical defects of the house. By the time it was sold to Lord Palumbo in 1972, Edith Farnsworth had changed many of the interior elements dictated so precisely by Mies. Following a ruinous flood in 1996, the house has been faithfully reconstructed to its original Miesian conception and at a Sotheby’s auction on 13th December 2003, last minute contributions saved the day; the National Trust cast the highest bid, assuring that the modernist house will be preserved and open to the public. The final price was $7.5 million plus fees.