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Originally Posted by
Urbanized
Does anybody think the Overholser Mansion cash flows? The Oklahoma Governors Mansion? The Round Barn in Arcadia? Marland Mansion in Ponca City? Frank Phillips' home in Bartlesville? Price Tower? Robie House in Chicago? Taliesin West? They are preserved because they are important places for one reason or another. In some cases thanks to the occupant, in some cases thanks to the designer or a movement it embodies.
By the way, as long as I mentioned his buildings, Frank Lloyd Wright designs were/are notorious for leaks, engineering failures and poor function. Wright was famous for forcing design ideas on clients. He made you use his furniture - designed for your house - which was uncomfortable as hell, and made you leave it where he placed it. If you were a patron, you accepted that - even embraced it - as a consequence of owning a building designed by Wright. You valued that you were a part of moving the needle in the world of architecture.
I'm sure that sounds really dumb to some people.
Stage Center was important enough that we should have been recognized locally as such a generation ago and its ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE brought to bear rather than the continuous head-beating-against-the-wall of trying to force theater tickets and little nonprofit organizations to pay for it. We missed as a community and failed on this one. Life goes on.
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