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Knott Residence, Yankeetown, FL, 1951 (with Ralph Twitchell) Project Not Built“Any sheet material if bent will develop additional strength. In the Knott residence the bending of two pieces of one-quarter-inch plywood enables a span of seven feet six inches. These two examples possibly indicate a certain preoccupation with independent umbrella-like roofs under which partitions are moved at will. This is tied to the demand for precision and clarity of definition of each part which are inherent in our concept of architecture. My insistence on separating the roof structure from the walls and filling the void with glass has been done at the expense of controlling the natural lighting to the degree which I hope one day to achieve. I have attempted in the Knott project to create a “cave” (the sunken area at the fireplace) within a “goldfish” bowl. "This house is an attempt to expand space by bending plywood and supporting it on a steel primary structure. A kind of open shelter, it is well isolated from its neighbors on the bend of a beautiful river on the west coast of Florida. |
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