A wronged Wright on Chicago’s West Side could receive long-needed repairs

The Walser House — a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed residence in the Austin neighborhood — is finally in line to receive the urgent repairs the historic, but dilapidated home has needed for years.

The bank holding the mortgage on the vacant 122-year-old home, 42 N. Central Ave., told Cook County Circuit Court Judge Lisa Ann Marino earlier this month that would begin repairing the house to correct a raft of long-standing building code violations.

Preservationists see the move as a critical first step toward the early Wright home being saved and reused.

Lee Bey, a former editorial board member, who also writes a monthly column on architecture, is now the full-time architecture critic for the Sun-Times. The change reflects Chicago’s strong interest in the built environment — and the forces that shape it — from neighborhood development and building preservation to the latest additions to our skyline. Bey is the author of “Southern Exposure: The Overlooked Architecture of Chicago’s South Side” (Northwestern University Press, 2019), which showcases his architectural photography and social commentary. He also hosted the public television special, “Building Blocks: The Architecture of Chicago’s South Side,” which earned him a 2023 Midwest Emmy nomination.

“[The home] is a valuable part of history and the thought of it degrading any further and being put at risk of being torn down would be tragic,” said Darnell Shields, executive director of the community group, Austin Coming Together.

Shields’ organization along with the Chicago-based Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy, Landmarks Illinois and Preservation Chicago, have been advocating for the home for the past several years.

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Built in 1903 for printing executive Joseph Jacob Walser Jr., the stucco home came relatively early in Wright’s career.

Its strong horizontal lines, overhanging eaves and bands of windows would later become trademarks of his larger and more celebrated Prairie School work such as the K. C. DeRhodes House, built in South Bend, Indiana in 1906; the Barton House, in Buffalo, New York in 1904; and the Emil Bach House, 7415 N. Sheridan Rd., from 1915.

The Walser House was built four years after Austin, once a stand-alone suburb, was annexed by the City of Chicago. It’s located a mile east of the village of Oak Park, home to world’s largest collection of Wright-designed houses.

Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy Preservation Programs Director John H. Waters said the home is among Wright’s first attempts to build moderately priced, well-designed residences.

“So [after Walser] you have [Wright’s] American System-Built houses of the nineteen-teens and then ultimately the Usonians in the ’30s, ’40s and ’50s,” he said. “So that thread is very important.

But even with that history, the home stood in disrepair for decades. Its last owner passed away in 2019.

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This drone shot shows many of the extensive repairs the Walser House needs.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

The nightmarish list of needed repairs includes rotting wood, cracked and failing exterior stucco, exposed structural elements, a deteriorating roof and chimney — and much more.

A status hearing on the repairs is scheduled for April 1. And on top of that, in a separate court, the house is in foreclosure — saddled with a reverse mortgage that exceeds the value of the home.

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The Austin neighborhood group and the Wright organization hope the home ultimately can be placed in the hands of a non-profit that can raise the millions needed to restore the house and convert it to public use.

Shields said his group wants to own the home and convert it into community spaces, meeting rooms and tourism purposes.

“Our organization is very interested in acquiring the property via donation so that we can work with the conservancy and work with the community to restore it and repurpose it,” Shields said.

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