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Former Lisle home rounds out Wright offerings in western Pennsylvania

ACME, Pa. - Western Pennsylvania has long been home to two of renowned architect Frank Lloyd Wright's best known works, Kentuck Knob and Fallingwater.

Now, a third Wright creation, the Duncan House, has been moved here from Lisle, offering visitors a broad architectural experience - tours of two impressive homes and an overnight stay in a 1950s-era house.

Each of the homes is a different style, providing an overview of the artist's work in a 30-mile radius, making it one of about a dozen places nationwide where several Wright buildings are on display in a concise area. Duncan House is one of only six Wright homes nationwide open to overnight guests.

"This is the trinity for us," said Patricia Coyle, director of marketing at Kentuck Knob. "We sell fantasy here because people come through here and they are transcended from their everyday life into Frank Lloyd Wright's vision."

Fallingwater, designed for the Kaufmann family of the department store fortune, is an upscale home that cost $155,000 in 1937, or $2.1 million today. The house's concrete terraces flow over and alongside the Bear Run waterfall, giving the appearance that it is one with nature.

Currently maintained and run by the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, Fallingwater gets more than 120,000 visitors annually. In December 2006, actress Angelina Jolie surprised boyfriend Brad Pitt with a visit to the home for his birthday.

"At a time when Wright had become known as the 'old man of modern architecture,' Fallingwater broke a 10-year lull in his work," tour guide Louise Dean shouts over the roar of the nearby waterfall.

Fallingwater made Wright popular again, and he went on to design another 200 buildings, among those Kentuck Knob and Duncan House.

Located just seven miles from Fallingwater, Kentuck Knob was built in 1956 for the Hagans, who owned the largest dairy farm west of the Alleghenies. The home is considered a higher-end Usonian, a name coined by the architect for works aimed at the middle class.

The stone house, with its copper roof, has a hexagonal theme. The six-sided shape aligns the overhangs and fills the skylights as the house stands in grand style over the Youghiogheny River gorge.

Wright, who was working on 12 other projects at the time, including the Guggenheim Museum in New York, visited the property only once for three hours while it was being built. He designed the entire structure by looking at topographic maps and interviewing the Hagans.

The home opened to visitors 11 years ago when Lord Peter Palumbo, the current owner, sought a way to maintain the house he bought for $600,000 in 1986. Palumbo, a friend of the late Princess Diana and Great Britain's royal family, put a massive sculpture garden on the property, including two pieces of the Berlin Wall.

Just 15 miles from there - but about a 30-minute drive along winding mountain roads - is the Duncan House. A more modest, prefabricated Usonian, it is one of only nine of this type ever built.

Carefully reconstructed on the 125-acre Polymath Park Resort, the home opened in June 2007 to overnight guests, nearly a year after the grueling process of putting it back together began.

"Every day was problem solving, really. … The challenge was not only rebuilding a house built 50 years earlier, but one that had fallen into disrepair," said Laura Nesmith, the resort's director, explaining that many parts had to be refurbished as construction was in progress.

Since it opened, the house has been a raging success.

"A lot of these people, their life dream is to see Fallingwater and they can't sit and they can't touch and then they come here and they can lay on the coach, and they love it," Nesmith said.

Spacious, bright and affordable at $47,000 - or about $350,000 today - Duncan House is a perfect example of Wright's attempt to allow the middle-class family to leave what he called "the box." Fifty years after it was built, the home remains modern.

The exterior is adorned with stripes in Cherokee red, Wright's signature color. The interior remains true to the year it was built, 1957. The kitchen has red Formica countertops, the appliances are original, the doors open accordion-style, the walls are bleached mahogany.

Yet the one-story design - featuring large windows, cathedral-style ceilings, a three-step drop to the living room, a carport door leading to the kitchen and master bedroom's glass shower stall - is evidence that today's ranch homes are direct descendants of Wright's Usonians.

"If you looked at all three of these houses you could see how Wright responded to a wealthy client, an upper-middle-class client and a middle-class family," said Lynda Waggoner, director of Fallingwater. "It gives you a spectrum of his work."

If you go

Wright homes in Pennsylvania

Go: To spend the night in a Frank Lloyd Wright house and see two of his most famous works

No: If Wright's works in Illinois and Wisconsin are as much as you care to see

Need to know: Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, (312) 663-5500, www.savewright.org

Getting there: Fallingwater is about a 525-mile drive from Chicago. United and American airlines each have nonstop flights from O'Hare to Pittsburgh International Airport, which is about a 90-minute drive from Fallingwater. Take I-76 southeast to Exit 91 (Donegal), turn left onto Pennsylvania Route 31 east, go two miles, turn right onto Pennsylvania Route 381 south and travel about 19 miles to Fallingwater.

Fallingwater: 1478 Mill Run Road, Mill Run, Pa.; www.paconserve.org, (724) 329-8501. Closed January and February. Tours: adults $16, children ages 6-12, $10. Children younger than 6 are not permitted inside the house but can tour the grounds. A grounds-only entrance costs $6 for adults. In-depth tours of the house are $55 and a sunset tour is $100. Advance reservations are necessary.

Kentuck Knob: 723 Kentuck Knob Road (Chalk Hill-Ohiopyle Road), Chalk Hill, Pa.; www.kentuckknob.com or (724) 329-1901. Reservations required for tours. Children younger than 6 are asked not to participate. Tours are about an hour long, and an independent tour of the sculpture garden takes about a half-hour. Regular tours, adults, $16; children ages 6-12, $10. In-depth tours are $55.

Duncan House: Usonian Drive, Acme, Pa.; www.polymathpark.com or (877) 833-7829. Open year-round. Overnight accommodations; book well in advance. For three people to stay overnight, $385 plus tax. Each additional person is $50. Children younger than 6 are not permitted. Tours available on select Sundays year-round; adults, $16; children ages 6-12, $8.

Visitors to Fallingwater, one of architect Frank Lloyd Wright's best-known works, listen to tour guides as they stand on its concrete terraces. Associated Press
Six-sided skylights line the overhangs and set the hexagonal theme of Kentuck Knob, a high-end Usonian home open for tours, above. A ceramic tile in the home bears the signature of the architect, top. Associated Press
A cathedral ceiling slopes over open space in the living room area of Duncan House at it's new location in Acme, Pa. Associated Press
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