The model for defining transformations of languages of designs presented in part 2 of this paper is illustrated using two well-known architectural styles of Frank Lloyd Wright. The Usonian houses of Wright's later career are characterized as a transformation of his earlier prairie houses by changing a grammar defining the earlier style into a grammar defining the succeeding one. General conclusions concerning the use of the model for comparing and constructing languages of designs are also given.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
References
1.
KnightT W, 1983, “Transformations of languages of designs: Part 2”Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design10129–154
2.
KoningHEizenbergJ, 1981, “The language of the prairie: Frank Lloyd Wright's prairie houses”Environment and Planning B8295–323
3.
SergeantJ, 1976Frank Lloyd Wright's Usonian Houses (Watson-Guptill Publications, New York)
4.
WrightF L, 1954The Natural House (Horizon Press, New York)