Historic house in Washington, United States
United States historic place
The Tracy House also known as the Bill and Elizabeth Tracy House is a Frank Lloyd Wright -designed Usonian Automatic home that was constructed in Normandy Park, Washington , a suburb near Seattle , in 1956.
The house, like other Wright-designed Usonian automatics, is composed of concrete blocks that is broken up by glass and redwood plywood. The Tracy House is 1,150 square feet (107 m2 ) and has three bedrooms and one bathroom as well as a two-car garage ; the lot itself is 31,000 square feet (2,900 m2 ) and faces the Puget Sound .[ 2]
The Tracy House was built for Bill and Elizabeth Tracy, who occupied it until the latter's death in 2012; the property was listed on the real estate market for the first time at a price of $950,000.[ 3]
In 2011, Seattle Met named it one of the ten greatest homes in the Seattle area.[ 4]
^ "National Register Information System" . National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service . July 9, 2010.
^ Cohen, Aubrey (January 20, 2012). "Tour Frank Lloyd Wright's Tracy House on Sunday" . Seattle Post-Intelligencer . Retrieved June 5, 2016 .
^ Belle, Rachel (October 30, 2012). "A Frank Lloyd Wright House is Up For Sale in Seattle" . MyNorthwest.com . Retrieved June 5, 2016 .
^ Cheek, Lawrence (December 16, 2011). "Seattle's 10 Greatest Homes" . Seattle Met . Retrieved June 5, 2016 .
Storrer, William Allin. The Frank Lloyd Wright Companion . University of Chicago Press (2006), S.389, ISBN 0-226-77621-2
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