All posts by paula

The Robie House – one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s masterpieces

While in Chicago we wanted to visit several of Frank Lloyd Wrights houses in the area. The Robie House is one of the most famous FLW houses and his best example of the “Prairie Style” house which is intended to fit and flow with the landscape of the Amerian prairie.

The Robie House was built in 1909-1911 while most architecture was still modeled after European designs – high turrets, grand entrances, emphasis on tallness. FLW felt that horizontal lines better captured the essence of the prairie.

This house was unique in the time it was built as it has a 3 car garage! Most houses still had stables, but Mr. Robie designed automobiles and was very modern and wanted his own car, one for his wife, and the third stall is for making repairs which was often necessary in the early days of the automobile.

Two servants lived with the Robies and their quarters were above the garage. The servants quarters flowed into the kitchen where they spent much of their time. The kitchen was quite modern, large and with an island which was unusual. Mr. Robie’s mother who needed much attention was right across the hall from the kitchen, also unusual but allowed the servants to care for her easily.

Frank Lloyd Wright often considered how a family lived when he designed a house for them and it shows in this house. While the bedrooms (master and 2 bedrooms for the children) are on the upper floor, there’s a children’s playroom on the ground floor near the billiard room. He also felt that entrances and hallways should be small and thus encouraged a person to pass through them and into the living spaces which opened up and welcomed you in. Therefore, the main entrance to the house was not visible from the street, and was small and cramped. The main entrance led into a foyer that was also fairly small and the main living areas were not visible from the foyer, to allow some privacy for the family until visitors were escorted into the main areas.

The Robies only lived in the house for one year before financial difficulties forced them to sell. The next family only lived there for about a year as well. The third family lived in the house for several years but after they sold it the house was used as a dormitory for a theology college, student housing, etc. It was vacant for many years as well. The condition of the house detiorated badly and the house was slated for demolition twice. Both times Frank Lloyd Wright himself came back to Chicago and fought to keep the house.

In the mid-90s a foundation purchased the home and they are slowly renovating it. Most of the furniture is in museums and the plan is to build replicas of much of the furniture once the structure itself is renovated.

The lack of furniture and slow renovation made the tour not quite as grand it as the house should be, but it was still a great tour.

Here are pictures we took during the tour:

Kansas City BBQ – yum!

While in Kansas City we went to a restaurant that serves the unique Kansas City style BBQ.  We chose Char Bar.  It was pretty close to the downtown area and was very upscale but comfortable.  I had a pulled turkey sandwich and Jeff had a brisket sandwich.

They were both really good!!

Chicago Deep Dish Pizza

While in the Chicago area we wanted to go to a pizza place and get a Chicago-style deep dish pizza.  We found a neighborhood place in an area called Falco’s Pizza in the Brighton Park neighborhood of Chicago.  Falco’s had a Cubs game going on the TVs and several guys were there to watch the game.  It has a pool table and some young people were there playing pool.  It’s small and not at all touristy which is what we wanted.

We ordered a medium (14″) pan pizza with mushrooms, onions and olives on it.  We waited for about 40 minutes for the pizza and we were starting to wonder what was going on.  Then it arrived!

Oh man, it was HUGE!  It was about 2″ deep and the edges even deeper.  It was LOADED with cheese, I said it must have 10 pounds of cheese on it and I don’t think that’s too far off the base.  It was REALLY delicious but we could only eat one slice each.  The rest had to go in a box and that box was really heavy!

We’ll be eating pizza for several days I think!  Here’s a picture of it:

What! Another wheel came off the trailer!

Earlier this year near Benson, AZ we had a wheel come off the trailer.  Not a tire, the whole wheel.  Turns out a bearing failed and caused the metal that connects the axle to the wheel assembly heated up and broke off.  We spent 3 days in a motel while a repair shop got the axle repaired.

Now, barely 2 months later the other wheel on the brand new axle did the same thing!  We were driving down the freeway with not a care when a motorist pulled alongside and gestured at us.  Jeff looked in the rearview mirror just in time to see the wheel separate from the trailer and roll along the road.  We pulled to the shoulder and braked and I got to watch the wheel pass us up and roll into the bushes at the side of the road.  YIPES!

From the freeway we couldn’t see anything but cornfields, trees and an occasional farmhouse, but luckily we were on an exit with a town just on the other side of the freeway.  The tow truck driver called the repair shop in that little town of Lewisburg, OH and was told they could do the repairs for us.  So, we chained up the dangling axle again and limped through town to the repair shop.  It’s a very busy shop and we had to park on the street, luckily it wasn’t a busy street!

We found a nearby motel that wouldn’t break the bank and Moon at the shop did a great job of calling around to find a new (another new!) axle that could be ready the next day.  Several places gave him an estimate of 2 weeks to get a new axle!  This place, about 90 minutes away, cut one down and had it ready the next day and we drove up to get it.  Two days at the motel and we were back on the road!

The place that cut down the axle for us gave us the most probably explanation of why we had this happen twice.  Each of our two axles is rated at 5,200 lbs.  Our trailer, especially loaded with all our belongings, is right at the max that the two axles can handle.  Our new axle is rated at 6,000 lbs and is a heavier duty axle, so hopefully this won’t happen again.

The folks at the motel were very friendly and pleasant, and the repair shop did a fabulous job of getting us fixed asap!

But, we had to eliminate our stop in Canton, OH to see the NFL Hall of Fame Museum in order to get back on schedule and not forfeit deposits at 3 different RV parks.  But, we may get back this way again later.

Here are pictures of the damaged axle:

St. Louis – the Gateway Arch

We visited St. Louis, MO to visit the Gateway Arch.  It is the tallest man-made monument in the U.S., taller than the Washington Monument.  It is a beautiful and simple design arch, very visible from miles around and as the skin is stainless steel, very shiny and pretty.  We rode to the top (and back down) in a small ‘capsule’ about 5 feet in diameter and round.  Five people can fit inside but it’s quite cramped  if you get five adults in there!  It’s designed to stay upright as it rides first vertically and then slants more horizontal as it gets to the top.

The view from the top is breathtaking!  The viewing area up top is quite small and has small windows to see out of that are angled oddly because of the shape of the arch.  The walls below the window are carpeted and designed so you can lean/rest your body against them in order to see out the windows.  But, it was definitely worth it!

The arch was built in the 1960s and was designed by a famous architect, Eero Saarinen.  He wanted it to be very simplistic in design rather than ‘fancy’.  But, that simple design made it very complicated to build.  They show a movie at the visitor center that explains the process of building each triangular section and how they mounted them.  The arch took over 3 years to built and while the estimate was that 13 men would lose their lives during construction, no one did!  The footage during the movie of the men at the top of the arch, walking along, hanging by one rope while guiding huge pieces of metal etc. was scary – no one had a safety harness on!

The arch at the top is 630 feet high.  There are some skyscrapers in the city that are reaching that height, but as the arch is right along the river at the edge of the city, it still stands out.

Here are some pictures we took:

Kansas City – a city that is in two states

We visited Kansas City and drove around the city one day to get a feel for it.  It’s a unique city in that the state line is pretty much right through the city.

It’s a fairly large city, with a baseball and a football stadium right next to each other at the east side of town right next to the freeway.  On our way out of the city a baseball game was about to start and we could see how full the stadium was getting.

We found a park to stop at right on the river and without realizing it we found a historic place.  Kaw Point Park is right at the confluence of the Kansas and Missouri Rivers and it’s where Lewis and Clark stayed for a few days to resupply and repair.  It sure wasn’t easy to find though, we had to drive through a parking lot for a big manufacturing plant, then make a sharp turn onto a levee and drive along a narrow dirt road on top of the levee to get to the park.  I don’t know why they ‘hid’ the park so well!

Here are some pictures we took at Kaw Point Park below.  You can click on the panorama picture in order to see it in more detail.  And, sorry about the shaded areas on the artist rendering, couldn’t adjust where the sun was!

Severe flooding – evacuate!

While we were staying in the Branson, MO area we had a couple of bad storms.  Two night in a row we had major thunderstorms and lots of rain, and on the second night we had a hail warning and a tornado watch.

But, about 10p.m. it was the rain and the flooding of the river our RV park was alongside that got us.  We got a call from the manager that the river was rising fast and we needed to evacuate.  We jumped up and got the rig secured, unplugged and hooked up to the truck in record time.

It was barely fast enough!  When I raised the leveling bars and picked up the little pads I put them on, I had to fish them out of the water.  We got out easily although we were both soaking wet.

We could see all our neighbors except one packing up.  The folks were were next door to us weren’t at home, and we don’t know if their RV flooded.  I hope not!

We went to a Lowe’s that was close by along with several of our neighbors.  In five years of full-time RVing this is the first time we’ve spent the night in a parking lot without water and electricity! We talked to several of our neighbors in the Lowe’s parking lot the next morning and found that one neighbor in 9G had flooding into his RV by the time he was able to get out and damage to his control panel.  We were in 7G and you can see from the picture below how far up the water would have risen for our site to be underwater.

The next morning we hooked up and headed to our next stop (that’s when we were planning to leave anyway) so we didn’t go back to the RV park.  I sure hope everyone got out ok!

Thorncrown Chapel – beautifully set in the Ozarks

As an architect, Jeff knew about this chapel and wanted to visit it. It was built by E. Fay Jones who was a student of Frank Lloyd Wright and opened in 1980. It was built by a family on their land here in the Ozark Mountains.

It’s an amazing structure and I can see why it won so many awards.

Here’s a link to the website about this site so you can learn more: http://www.thorncrown.com/

And here are a few pictures we took: