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Laurent House

Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House
Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House.JPG
The Laurent House in 2013, shortly after a storm damaged the roof
Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House is located in Illinois
Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House
Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House is located in the US
Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House
Location Rockford, Illinois
Coordinates 42°17′59″N 89°1′28″W / 42.29972°N 89.02444°W / 42.29972; -89.02444Coordinates: 42°17′59″N 89°1′28″W / 42.29972°N 89.02444°W / 42.29972; -89.02444
Built 1951
Architect Frank Lloyd Wright
Architectural style Usonian
NRHP Reference # 12000555
Added to NRHP August 28, 2012

The Kenneth and Phyllis Laurent House is a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Usonian house in Rockford, Illinois. It was the only house that Wright designed for a physically disabled client.

Kenneth Laurent was born in Illinois in 1919. In 1937, he moved to Rockford and began working as a statistician for the National Lock Corporation. It was in Rockford where he met his wife, Phyllis Carman. Kenneth Laurent served with the U.S. Navy during World War II, returning to Rockford on March 17, 1946. However, after only a few months, he began exhibiting severe pain in his midsection and lost the feeling in his legs. He was diagnosed with a spinal tumor that May, and though an operation successfully removed the tumor, he was rendered paralyzed. After rehabilitation at the Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital, he received compensation as part of the Specially Adapted Housing program. This program granted disabled veterans 50% of costs for a house to accommodate their disability. This provided an excellent opportunity for the Laurents to purchase their first home.

Phyllis read an article in a summer issue of House Beautiful, which featured the article "The Love Affair of a Man and his House." The article was a review of Frank Lloyd Wright's Loren Pope Residence in Falls Church, Virginia, which was built for the author. Kenneth wrote to Wright in August 1948, suggesting that he design a house on an urban lot that the Laurents had selected. The Laurents were invited to Taliesin in Spring Green, Wisconsin to discuss the project. Wright disliked the lot that the Laurents had suggested and urged his clients to pick a site on the fringes of the city. The Laurents listened to Wright's request, and found a pleasant lot up against a creek. Wright approved the site and began his design in January 1949. The final plans were completed that August. The design was unusual for Wright because it had to be wheelchair-accessible. It is the only house that Wright designed for a person with a disability.


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