Photos © Mark Hertzberg (2025)
This is a quick update on some developments in the World of Frank Lloyd Wright in Wisconsin, from another Road Scholar tour I helped lead this week:
Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church – Wauwatosa
Workers smooth out newly poured concrete at the entrance to the church Thursday June 19. This is part of Phase 2 of work at the church.

Phase 1 saw repairs to the roof last year and work on the gate to the garden level.
Phase 3 will see new carpeting, and cushions for the pews next year, as well as the pews being refinished. Photos of the roof work are at:https://wrightinracine.net/2024/12/10/greek-church-roof-resplendent-again/
Taliesin: The pond, which Wright is said to have referred to as Lake Taliesin, is filled again, after an absence of several years, and waters flows over the dam by the original entrance to the estate:



Wyoming Valley School: The school opened in early 1958 and closed in 1990. Today it was filled with the sound of children again, children participating in the Wyoming Valley Experience, a six-week long summer art camp. The adults shown in one of the two classrooms are guests from the Road Scholar tour:








Earlier in the day the Road Scholar guests were unexpectedly invited into a Wright home which is not normally open to tours (which is why I am not identifying it). One of the guests told me he was thrilled to see a house that is being lived in, as opposed to another house museum. Indeed, and that is why it was also so heartening to see children in the school.
Please scroll down for previous posts
Links to Wyoming Valley School; Taliesin Preservation, and Road Scholar’s weeklong tour in Chicago, Oak Park, Racine, Milwaukee, Madison, ad Spring Green:
https://www.wyomingvalleyschool.org
https://www.taliesinpreservation.org
https://www.roadscholar.org/find-an-adventure/22976/Architectural-Masterworks-of-Frank-Lloyd-Wright


































The reflections were visible only when I was seated at a desk, and disappeared when I stood













SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine (1936)






































Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, 1956
Florida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938
Florida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938
Florida Southern College, Lakeland, Florida, 1938
Guggenheim Museum, New York City, 1943
Hillside Drafting Room, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1933
Hollyhock House, Los Angeles, 1919
Imperial Hotel entry way, Tokyo, 1915, as rebuilt at Meiji Mura near Nagoya, Japan
Lindholm Service Station, Cloquet, Minnesota, 1956
Marin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957
Marin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957
Meyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908
Meyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908
Meyer May House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1908
Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952
Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952
Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1952
Romeo and Juliet Windmill, Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1898
SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936
SC Johnson Administration Building, Racine, Wisconsin, 1936
SC Johnson Research Tower, Racine, Wisconsin, 1943/44
Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925
Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925
Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925
Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911, 1925
Thomas P. Hardy House, Racine, Wisconsin, 1904/05
Wingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937
Wingspread, Wind Point, Wisconsin, 1937

















































Sybil Knop talks to Road Scholar guests touring the Burnham Block May 19











This is not a version of the Frank Lloyd Wright signature tile…it is one of the faded red squares that have been used as social distancing markers on Burnham Street.
“I thought Frank Lloyd Wright hated basements.” They were not his favorite spaces, but he did not eschew them entirely. This is one of the vents from the basement at 2032 – 2034.







This period stove is in a closet until the restoration is done.






















We planned to stay only a couple of hours and not overstay our welcome, but we were like family enjoying the house in the living room after dinner until past 11 p.m.! The light was harsh when we arrived at 5 p.m., and I wondered how it would change through the evening:






















































