FALLINGWATER
- Frank Lloyd Wright
1491 Mill Run Rd, Mill Run, PA 15464
Frank Lloyd Wright was an American architect, designer, writer, and educator who designed over 1,100 buildings in his life. When he was hired as Fallingwater's architect in late 1934, he was 67 years old and had designed only two buildings in six years. His career desperately needed reviving.

Wright designed Fallingwater in 1935 as a private residence for Edgar J. Kaufmann Sr., a Pittsburgh department store owner, and his family. The Kaufmanns had purchased land at Bear Run in southwestern Pennsylvania as a weekend retreat, and they expected Wright to design a building across from the waterfalls where they could be enjoyed from afar. Instead, Wright placed the residence directly over the waterfall itself, allowing the family to not only view nature but actually live in its midst. By situating the house this way, the Kaufmanns would always hear the movement of water and be aware of the waterfall's presence.
Built partly over a waterfall on the Bear Run stream, the three-story house exemplifies Wright's philosophy of organic architecture, which sought to integrate humans, architecture, and nature so that each would be improved by the relationship. Construction began in 1936 using local craftsmen and laborers, with materials excavated directly from the Kaufmann's land. The house was mainly complete in 1937, with the family moving in that fall. Wright added a guest house in 1939 to accommodate the Kaufmanns' curious visitors after the house quickly gained fame when Time magazine featured Wright and a drawing of the building on its January 17, 1938 cover.

The Kaufmanns quickly noticed that the main terrace was beginning to sag, later recognized as the result of Wright's refusal to use additional steel despite his contractor's suggestions. The terrace was repaired decades later by adding steel cables. After Edgar Sr. and his wife died in the 1950s, their son Edgar Jr., acting on his father's wishes, entrusted the building and 469 acres of nearby land to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy in 1963.
Fallingwater opened to the public as a museum in 1964 with the Kaufmanns' thoughtfully selected furniture and curated art collection intact. Since then, it has welcomed over five million visitors from around the world. The conservancy continues to maintain the building, welcoming about 150,000 visitors per year. In 2019, Fallingwater was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site along with seven other Frank Lloyd Wright buildings.



