Progress on the Burnham Block

© Mark Hertzberg (2025)

Bit by bit, parcel by parcel, the American System-Built homes in the 2700 block of W. Burnham Street in Milwaukee are coming together for their parent organization, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block. Burnham Block is steward of five of the six structures: the two single family homes, and three of the four duplexes.

On November 3 the City of Milwaukee’s Historic Preservation Committee unanimously approved plans for restoration of the Model C3 at 1835 N. Layton (at the corner with Burnham Street), and demolition of a shed that was built on the property in 1977. Burnham had already received its third (!) Save America’s Treasures (SAT) grant from the National Park Service in the amount of $407,000 for the work. A matching amount has to be raised from donors for the entire amount to be released.

LR 2714, Duplexes 2017 .jpgThis photograph shows one of the two single family homes (the Model B1) and the four duplexes. The Model C3 single family home, below, sits to the right of the B1.

LR 1835 N. Layton 10.16.25 002.jpgDocent Bill Schumacher leads a tour of the Burnham Block, including the C3

The C3 is sometimes referred to as the “Pizza Hut” house because of the mansard roof which came from two Pizza Hut restaurants in the 1970s. Its stucco was covered with a “Perma-Stone” veneer in 1958, and the open porch was enclosed.

LR 1835 N. Layton 10.16.25 001.jpg

The Burnham Block adventure started in 2005 with the purchase of the Model B1 at 2714  W. Burnham by the Frank Lloyd Wright in Wisconsin Tourism Heritage organization. A Save America’s Treasures grant and 28 major gifts including support from the Barbara Meyer Elsner Foundation enabled its restoration as a house museum.

LR Burnham WiW Board 4.16.05.jpgWright in Wisconsin board members discuss their purchase of the B1 in April 2005. Mike Lilek, the driving force behind the Burnham projects, is left. Barbara Meyer Elsner is third from right.

There were many difficult discussions at board meetings about what it would mean for the organization to become a steward of a Wright property rather than only fulfilling its founding mission of promoting Wright tourism and awareness and education about Wright’s work in Wisconsin. Then came the purchase of the Two Family Flat C duplex at the end of the block. And then came the purchases of two more of the duplexes (one of which is the world’s only aluminum sided Frank Lloyd Wright structure…the siding was added in 1968). The fourth duplex is independently owned. It was converted into a single family home in the 1980s and is available for overnight rentals through Vrbo.

Lilek reflects on the discussions at board meetings, “The board meetings became increasingly focused on the Burnham Block, to the detriment of the organization. Then-president George Hall likened it to ‘Your teenager growing up and needing their own space.'”

He recalls, “In 2017 Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin was reorganized to better support two distinguished missions. Out of the reorganization came Wright in Wisconsin, Inc. to carry forward the original focus on Frank Lloyd Wright tourism and Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block to focus exclusively on on the Burnham Block historic site in Milwaukee.”

LR WiW Reorganization 005.jpg

LR WiW Reorganization 006.jpgGeorge Hall, left, and Mike Lilek sign the reorganization papers August 3, 2017.

Below are period advertisements of the 1835 N. Layton house and photographs of what the house looks like today:

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 004.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 010.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 011.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 012.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 022.jpg

LR IMG_2743.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 10.16.25 003.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 013.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 017.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 018.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 019.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 019A.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 015.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 016.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 020.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 021.jpg

The next three photos show where some of the original furnishings – seen in the drawing above – were originally placed. It is not known when they were removed, or where they ended up.

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 024.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 025.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 027.jpg

The original open porch was enclosed, possibly when then exterior veneer was added:

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 028.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 029.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 030.jpg

Bedroom and bathroom photos:

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 031.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 033.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 034.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 035.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 036.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 037.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 044.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 042.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 043.jpg

The kitchen:

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 038.jpg

 

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 039B.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 039A.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 040.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 041.jpg

The ceiling trim:

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 045.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 047.jpg

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 048.jpg

The Burnham Block is working with Ramlow / Stein Architecture and Interiors on the restoration. The National Park Service and the Wisconsin State Historic Preservation Officer have already signed off on the restoration project. Now that the city has given its approval, contractors are being interviewed, and it is hoped that work will begin “soon,” according to Lilek. Contributions are welcome to match the SAT grant.

LR 1835 N. Layton 9.25.25 005.jpg

Links:

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block:

http://wrightinmilwaukee.org

Ramlow / Stein:

https://www.ramlowstein.com

Wright in Wisconsin:

https://wrightinwisconsin.org

Vrbo rental link:

https://www.vrbo.com/434063

Please scroll down for previous articles on this website.

 

 

 

 

 

Remembering Barbara Elsner

Photos © Mark Hertzberg

Barbara Elsner, a tour de force in the preservation of Frank Lloyd Wright’s architecture in Wisconsin – particularly in Milwaukee – died August 25. She was 99.

LR BC 2015 Elsner .jpgBarbara Elsner – 2015: At the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy annual conference in Milwaukee, her hometown 

I got to know Elsner when I served on the board of the  Frank Lloyd Wright’s Wisconsin Tourism Heritage Program (“Wright in Wisconsin”) from 2004 – 2020. She was a founding member of the organization. Our board was in discussions about whether or not to purchase Wright’s American System-Built Model B1 at 2714 W. Burnham Street in Milwaukee as early as a strategic planning session at Wingspread in 2002. Some of the board discussions were heated. Were we only about promoting Wright tourism (a founding principle) or should we become property owners as a means of furthering our mission of promoting Wright’s architecture in our state? Elsner was a strong advocate of expanding the mission to include “bricks and mortar.”

LR Burnham WiW Board 4.16.05.jpgMike Lilek, left, and Barbara Elsner, third from right, at a Wright in Wisconsin board meeting at the newly-purchased Model B1, April 2005. Lilek would oversee our stewardship of the Burnham Block properties.

We bought the house and restored it, with support from the Barbara Meyer Elsner Foundation and a Save Americas Treasures grant. There were 28 major gifts in all. We gradually added more of the AS-B properties to our portfolio, not always without dissension. In August 2017, we reorganized into two organizations: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block (focused on the Burnham Block) and Wright In Wisconsin (focused on the longstanding mission to promote Wright tourism). Mike Lilek, who had shepherded our work on the Burnham properties became president of the new organization. He was Elsner’s son-in-law. The Burnham Block now owns five of the six homes (three of the four duplexes and both single family homes; the fourth duplex remains in private hands and operates as an overnight rental property).

I leave it to Lilek to tell you about Elsner’s extraordinary legacy. Below is the email he sent out, announcing her passing:

Dear Fellow Board Members and Friends,

It is with sadness that I share the news of the passing of Barbara Meyer Elsner, an esteemed member of our Advisory Board and a long-time member of our Board of Directors. She passed away peacefully on Monday, August 25th, 2025, surrounded by family. She was 99 years old.

Barbara leaves behind a towering legacy of dedication, leadership, and service to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block and its predecessor, Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin.

She was a founding member of Frank Lloyd Wright Wisconsin and served as president.

She was a founding member and past Member of the Board of Directors of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, based in Chicago, IL.

She served on the Wisconsin Governor’s Commission on the preservation of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin. She has generously donated her time and financial support to various Wright projects, including the restoration of the Romeo and Juliet Windmill at Taliesin and the Seth Peterson Cottage on Mirror Lake.

She was a strong advocate for acquiring and restoring the Burnham Block homes. She partnered with Kathleen Brady to lead the primary fundraising effort for the restoration of Models B1 and D4. Her Barbara Meyer Elsner Foundation also provided the Burnham Block with significant financial support, including a major contribution toward the current restoration of the Model C3. Even after retiring from active board service, she continued to be a valued advisor and supporter of our mission. She was a long-serving member of our Interiors Committee.

She also played a major role in the preservation and restoration of the Pabst Mansion, serving as president of the mansion’s Board of Directors and as Executive Director for two years.

Barbara has led many grassroots efforts.  Notable among them was the effort to protect the North Point Historic District from planned institutional expansion. She is also a founding member of the Water Tower Landmark Trust and a board member of Preserve Our Parks. She played a role in organizing the Penfield Children’s Center. She was a founding member of the American Heritage Society of the Milwaukee Art Museum. She helped bring ballet to Milwaukee.

Robert and Barbara Elsner purchased the Bogk House in 1955.  Under Barbara’s care and guidance, the home was meticulously maintained. Barbara generously opened the Bogk House to visiting architectural scholars and students from around the world. Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava noted that the Bogk House was one of his two “must-see” buildings in Milwaukee.

LR Bogk 2022.jpgThe Bogk House

Barbara has played a major role in raising the awareness of Frank Lloyd Wright on the Burnham Block, in Wisconsin, and far beyond.  Her generosity, extraordinary spirit, and tireless energy have been a benefit to all of us. Barbara will be deeply missed.

She made a huge impact on the world we live in. A celebration of life will be held in the coming weeks; details will follow.

Sincerely,
Michael P. Lilek, President Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block

LR Elsner SCJ 2010.jpg

Elsner in the Wright research library at SC Johnson

LR Burnham 2022 001.jpg

Links:

YouTube interview with Barbara Elsner, and history of the Bogk House:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZjJAi-c23I

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Burnham Block:

https://savewright.org

Wright in Wisconsin:

https://wrightinwisconsin.org

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy:

https://savewright.org

Please scroll down for previous articles on this website