08-26-2014, 10:14 AM
Johnson Wax Administration Building, Racine, WI.1936-39 AD
A totally different, but no less innovative design was the Johnson Wax Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin. Its magical interior creates a sense of a protected community, an ideal workplace where space is allotted according to egalitarian principles. All curves, the huge interior is one vast work area. A ceiling of glass tubing between circle-topped columns admits diffused light to give a submarine glow to the interior. The form of Wright’s sixty columns (each 30 feet high) has been compared to lily pads or golf trees. Although fanciful, they serve a practical function. The hollow tubes are storm drains.
A totally different, but no less innovative design was the Johnson Wax Administration Building in Racine, Wisconsin. Its magical interior creates a sense of a protected community, an ideal workplace where space is allotted according to egalitarian principles. All curves, the huge interior is one vast work area. A ceiling of glass tubing between circle-topped columns admits diffused light to give a submarine glow to the interior. The form of Wright’s sixty columns (each 30 feet high) has been compared to lily pads or golf trees. Although fanciful, they serve a practical function. The hollow tubes are storm drains.