Prairie School

Robie House; 57th Street Elevation, photo by Richard Nickel The Prairie style was developed in the late-19th and early-20th centuries by Frank Lloyd Wright and other architects as "a modern architecture for a democratic American society." Because it was largely developed in the Chicago area, this style is well represented here by some of the most important buildings of the early-20th century. Significant examples can be found in Rogers Park, Hyde Park, and Beverly.

Common characteristics are:

  • horizontal proportions
  • flat brick or stucco walls, often outlined with wooden strips of contrasting color
  • windows with abstract, geometric ornament
  • hip or gable roofs with wide, overhanging eaves

Landmarks Home
Style Guide
American Four-Square
Art Deco/Moderne
Arts and Crafts
Chateauesque
Chicago School
Classical Revival/Beaux-Arts
Colonial Revival
Craftsman
Dutch Colonial Revival
Eastlake/Stick
Gothic Revival
Greek Revival
International
Italianate
Middle Eastern
Oriental
Prairie School
Queen Anne
Renaissance Revival
Romanesque Revival
Second Empire
Spanish Revival
Sullivanesque
Tudor Revival
Worker's Cottage

1. Robie House; 57th Street Elevation, photo by Richard Nickel

 
 
 

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