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| Essential
Architecture- Search by architect
Walter Burley Griffin |
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Few architects have a Landmark District named
after them, as does Walter Burley Griffin (1876-1937). A native of Oak Park,
Griffin studied architecture at the University of Illinois. After working on
his own for a few years, in 1901 Griffin joined the studio of famed
architect Frank Lloyd Wright, where he was the office manager and
construction supervisor for many of Wright's early designs. Another of
Wright's employees at the time was Marion Mahoney, whom Griffin married in
1911.

In 1906, Griffin opened his own architectural office. Most of his
commissions were for private residences, which permitted him to develop his
own unique approach to the Prairie School style. Among his notable local
designs are three sets of twin houses (1400-block of Church Street in
Evanston, and the 5900-block of North Magnolia and 2300-block of West
Montana in Chicago), the Cornell Store and Flats at 1220 E. 75th St., the
Tolles House in the Longwood Drive District, and the seven houses in the
Walter Burley Griffin Place District, which comprises the city's greatest
concentration of Prairie-style architecture.
In 1912, Griffin won an international competition to design a new capital
city for Australia, called Canberra. He settled there permanently two years
later. In 1936, he and his wife moved to India, where they received many
private and institutional commissions.
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