This was probably a big administrative mistake.  I was on the advisory board of 
Florida Southern for many years.  We were very proud of the buildings and many 
people visited the campus because of them.

Jerry

From: GatorTalk <[email protected]> on behalf of Oliver Barry 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: GatorTalk <[email protected]>
Date: Tuesday, January 23, 2018 at 4:45 PM
To: GatorTalk <[email protected]>
Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [gatornews] Frank Lloyd Wright Designed A Fraternity 
House For UF, And It Was Never Built – WUFT News

Dang! It is a nice looking building, too.
It would have fit in nicely with most of the other fraternity houses at UF.

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI
Real Estate Broker
PARKS
305B Indian Lake Blvd
Suite 220
Hendersonville TN 37075
Phone: 615-826-4040
Mobile: 615-972-4239
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Woody Bass
Sent: Tuesday, January 23, 2018 9:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gatornews] Frank Lloyd Wright Designed A Fraternity House For UF, And 
It Was Never Built – WUFT News


https://www.wuft.org/news/2018/01/23/frank-lloyd-wright-designed-a-fraternity-house-for-uf-and-it-was-never-built/?utm_source=The+Point&utm_campaign=4bcbf62c44-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_01_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_5a40db04c3-4bcbf62c44-311234577<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.wuft.org%2Fnews%2F2018%2F01%2F23%2Ffrank-lloyd-wright-designed-a-fraternity-house-for-uf-and-it-was-never-built%2F%3Futm_source%3DThe%2BPoint%26utm_campaign%3D4bcbf62c44-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_01_02%26utm_medium%3Demail%26utm_term%3D0_5a40db04c3-4bcbf62c44-311234577&data=02%7C01%7Cbelloit%40clarion.edu%7C1bef9e1fa57f4541a00c08d562aaad8c%7Cac5281b27ef14be9a6b48db2cf96ecca%7C0%7C1%7C636523407559086020&sdata=44A4hGvfatVY%2BDaWWNAvrqNNr7rCGQ3xU20BCNWGFa8%3D&reserved=0>
Frank Lloyd Wright Designed A Fraternity House For UF, And It Was Never Built
Ethan 
Magoc<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.wuft.org%2Fnews%2Fauthor%2Femagoc%2F&data=02%7C01%7Cbelloit%40clarion.edu%7C1bef9e1fa57f4541a00c08d562aaad8c%7Cac5281b27ef14be9a6b48db2cf96ecca%7C0%7C1%7C636523407559086020&sdata=wC1q3uzdIQBcxznZYVc6EoC8xDHnVEXi7iR59hzqoPs%3D&reserved=0>

As Ken Treister remembers it, he and his circle of friends at the University of 
Florida in 1951 had two desires.

The first was for a fraternity house. Zeta Beta Tau, of which he was a member, 
was then among a group of UF fraternities looking for a permanent campus home.

Rebellion was his group’s other pursuit. In Treister’s estimation, the School 
of Architecture’s faculty at the time had a “closed mind” and didn’t welcome 
visiting faculty. Treister and his architectural studies peers wanted to invite 
the guest of all guests: Frank Lloyd Wright.

“Frank Lloyd Wright was a celebrity architect unlike any we’ve ever had and 
that we don’t have today,” University of Florida archivist John Nemmers says. 
“There was Frank Lloyd Wright, and there was everyone else.”

He was already known worldwide in the 1950s for his designs. His reputation for 
speaking his mind also preceded him.

“He was a very assertive architect. He wasn’t introspective or bashful. He was 
very much interested in publicity,” Treister says. “Rebels loved rebels.”

Letters were exchanged, and Wright one day flew into the Gainesville airport. 
His speaking fee was $1,000; the students sold $1 tickets to cover the cost, 
and the Oct. 23, 1951, crowd at the Florida Gym was standing room only.

He arrived and walked past the assembled architecture professors and instead 
met students informally in the lobby, giving an impromptu lecture. The speech 
itself was not about architecture, with Wright opting for a focus on 
international affairs.

Treister later chauffeured Wright during his trip, and he summoned the audacity 
to ask him to solve that other problem. Would he design a fraternity hosue for 
the University of Florida and Zeta Beta Tau?

Yes, he told the 20-year-old student, but on one condition. Architecture 
students themselves had to help construct it — the foundation digging, 
bricklaying, window fitting, everything.

His request had a precedent. One hundred and twenty miles to the south, Florida 
Southern College students were building by hand a number of Wright-designed 
structures on campus. It saved the school money, sure, but to Wright’s thinking 
allowed students to learn by doing.
[mage removed by sender.]Florida Southern College is home to the “largest 
single-site collection” of Wright buildings in the world.

The case for student labor at Florida Southern was easier. It’s a private 
college. In Gainesville, the situation was going to be more bureaucratically 
challenging, with any UF project requiring state approval and oversight.

“He always said that committees are a disaster,” Treister said.

Still, Wright returned to his home in Wisconsin after the Gainesville visit and 
created blueprints for a fraternity house to be built on a wooded and hilly 
site on the University of Florida campus. The intended area is today known as 
Fraternity Row.
[mage removed by sender.]At the University of Florida’s special collections 
archive: blueprints of the unbuilt fraternity home.

When the fraternity brothers received Wright’s blueprints, Treister said they 
were duly impressed: “It’s one of the most beautiful things Frank Lloyd Wright 
ever designed.”

That was one group’s opinion. As Treister and his cohort graduated, the grand 
plan went awry. The university had a building committee, and the state had a 
Board of Control, which reviewed the Wright plan and found 22 potential code 
violations — “issues of nonconformity,” as Treister later put it.

The most significant? There was no second fire escape.

Based on correspondence records left behind, Nemmers says, “the three parties 
weren’t always in step with each other.”

Treister remembers Wright writing in response that “any healthy college student 
can jump off the rear terrace and land safely on his feet.” The 8-foot jump 
from that terrace was apparently too high a hurdle for by-the-book state 
officials. Couple it with the student labor and construction cost issue, and 
the project was doomed.

But what would the Wright-designed ZBT house have looked like?

[mage removed by sender.]

It was long and narrow, with an overhanging roof above the two-tiered front 
porch. The showers on the second level were open air, which would have made for 
cold cleansing on January mornings, and the entire structure was intended to 
conform to the hillside against which it would be constructed.

The house ZBT eventually occupied on campus was not a Frank Lloyd Wright 
creation.

“Every visitor to the University of Florida would go to see the Frank Lloyd 
Wright house, and it would be a showcase worth many, many millions of dollars,” 
Treister says. “But the people on the building committee weren’t interested in 
Frank Lloyd Wright.”

For those interested in seeing Wright’s creation today, an architecture 
professor and her class made it possible, albeit on a smaller scale. Martha 
Kohen’s students in recent years built a model from Wright’s blueprints, and 
for a time that model sat in former UF President Bernie Machen’s office.

“He also was enamored of the story,” Nemmers says.

Today, it’s preserved at the university’s Smathers Library in the architecture 
archives, and Treister this month published a book about this unrealized part 
of UF history through LibraryPress@UF. It’s available online as a 
PDF.<https://na01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=http%3A%2F%2Fufdc.ufl.edu%2FAA00061959%2F00001&data=02%7C01%7Cbelloit%40clarion.edu%7C1bef9e1fa57f4541a00c08d562aaad8c%7Cac5281b27ef14be9a6b48db2cf96ecca%7C0%7C1%7C636523407559086020&sdata=4mAurz8Wawf7NG8T61ZehQtzAMjJW6%2BHG%2BsL6TicaB8%3D&reserved=0>

See more of the students’ scale model below.

[mage removed by sender.]

[mage removed by sender.]

[mage removed by sender.]


Woody

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