Sol Friedman House
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sol_Friedman_House an entity of type: Thing
Sol Friedman House ou Toyhill est une villa de style moderne-usonia-organique-Prairie School, construite en 1948 par l'architecte américain Frank Lloyd Wright (FLW, 1867-1959) à Pleasantville, à 40 km au nord de New York aux États-Unis. Elle est labellisée Registre national des lieux historiques de État de New York depuis 2012.
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House Toyhill, was built in Pleasantville, New York in 1948. This was the first of the three Frank Lloyd Wright homes built in the "Usonia Homes" development north of New York City. The Friedman House forms part of the post-war development of Wright's use of the circle, culminating in his Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan. The Sol Friedman house in Pleasantville, N.Y., is roofed with mushroom-like concrete slabs; the two intersecting closed circles of the actual dwelling are balanced at the end of a straight terrace parapet by the mushroom-shaped carport. This house was completed in 1949 with battered (sloped) walls of almost Richardsonian random ashlar masonry below a strip of metal-framed windows.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House (Toyhill)
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House
xsd:float
41.12885665893555
xsd:float
-73.74800109863281
xsd:integer
20045817
xsd:integer
968298810
rdf:langString
House
rdf:langString
New York
xsd:integer
1948
xsd:string
41.128856 -73.748003
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House ou Toyhill est une villa de style moderne-usonia-organique-Prairie School, construite en 1948 par l'architecte américain Frank Lloyd Wright (FLW, 1867-1959) à Pleasantville, à 40 km au nord de New York aux États-Unis. Elle est labellisée Registre national des lieux historiques de État de New York depuis 2012.
rdf:langString
Sol Friedman House Toyhill, was built in Pleasantville, New York in 1948. This was the first of the three Frank Lloyd Wright homes built in the "Usonia Homes" development north of New York City. The Friedman House forms part of the post-war development of Wright's use of the circle, culminating in his Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in Manhattan. The Sol Friedman house in Pleasantville, N.Y., is roofed with mushroom-like concrete slabs; the two intersecting closed circles of the actual dwelling are balanced at the end of a straight terrace parapet by the mushroom-shaped carport. This house was completed in 1949 with battered (sloped) walls of almost Richardsonian random ashlar masonry below a strip of metal-framed windows. Wright dubbed the house Toyhill because Sol Friedman was a retailer of books, records, and (in some stores) toys.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
2445
xsd:string
1948
<Geometry>
POINT(-73.748001098633 41.128856658936)