In the small town of CloÂquet, MinÂnesoÂta stands a piece of urban utopia. It takes the surÂprisÂing form of a gas staÂtion, albeit one designed by no less a visionÂary of AmerÂiÂcan archiÂtecÂture than Frank Lloyd Wright. He origÂiÂnalÂly conÂceived it as an eleÂment of BroadÂacre City, a form of mechÂaÂnized rurÂal setÂtleÂment intendÂed as a JefÂferÂsonÂian democÂraÂcy-inspired rebuke against what Wright saw as the evils of the overÂgrown twenÂtiÂeth cenÂtuÂry city, first pubÂlicly preÂsentÂed in his 1932 book The DisÂapÂpearÂing City. “That’s an aspiÂraÂtional title,” says archiÂtecÂturÂal hisÂtoÂriÂan Richard KroÂnÂick in the Twin Cities PBS video above. “He thought that cities should go away.”
Cities didÂn’t go away, and BroadÂacre City remained specÂuÂlaÂtive, though Wright did purÂsue every opporÂtuÂniÂty he could idenÂtiÂfy to bring it closÂer to realÂiÂty. “In 1952, Ray and Emma LindÂholm comÂmisÂsioned Frank Lloyd Wright to build them a home on the south side of CloÂquet,” writes phoÂtogÂraÂphÂer Susan TreÂgoÂning.
When Wright “disÂcovÂered that Mr. LindÂholm was in the petroÂleÂum busiÂness, he menÂtioned that he was quite interÂestÂed in gas staÂtion design.” When LindÂholm decidÂed to rebuild a Phillips 66 staÂtion a few years latÂer, he acceptÂed Wright’s design proÂposÂal, callÂing it “an experÂiÂment to see if a litÂtle beauÂty couldn’t be incorÂpoÂratÂed in someÂthing as comÂmonÂplace as a serÂvice staÂtion” — though Wright himÂself, charÂacÂterÂisÂtiÂcalÂly, wasÂn’t thinkÂing in quite such humÂble terms.
Wright’s R. W. LindÂholm SerÂvice StaÂtion incorÂpoÂrates a canÂtilevered upper-levÂel “cusÂtomer lounge,” and the idea, as KroÂnÂick puts it, “was that cusÂtomers would sit up here and while their time away waitÂing for their cars to be repaired,” and no doubt “disÂcuss the issues of the day.” In Wright’s mind, “this litÂtle room is where the details of democÂraÂcy would be worked out.” As with SouthÂdale CenÂter, VicÂtor GruÂen’s pioÂneerÂing shopÂping mall that had opened two years earÂliÂer in MinÂneapoÂlis, two hours south of CloÂquet, the comÂmuÂniÂty aspect of the design nevÂer came to fruition: though its winÂdows offer a disÂtincÂtiveÂly AmerÂiÂcan (or to use Wright’s lanÂguage, UsonÂian) vista, the cusÂtomer lounge has a bare, disÂused look in the picÂtures visÂiÂtors take today.
Image by Library of ConÂgress, via WikiÂmeÂdia ComÂmons
There are many such visÂiÂtors, who arrive from not just all around the counÂtry but all around the world. But when it was last sold in 2018, the buyÂer it found was relÂaÂtiveÂly local: MinÂnesoÂta-born Andrew VolÂna, ownÂer of such MinÂneapoÂlis operÂaÂtions as vinyl-record manÂuÂfacÂturÂer NoiseÂland IndusÂtries and the once-abanÂdoned, now-renÂoÂvatÂed HolÂlyÂwood TheÂater. “Wright saw the staÂtion as a culÂturÂal cenÂter, someÂwhere to meet a friend, get your car fixed, and have a cup of cofÂfee while you waitÂed,” writes TreÂgoÂning, though he nevÂer did make it back out to the finÂished buildÂing before he died in 1959. These sixÂty-odd years latÂer, perÂhaps VolÂna will be the one to turn this unlikeÂly archiÂtecÂturÂal hot spot into an even less likeÂly social one as well.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Frank Lloyd Wright Designs an Urban Utopia: See His Hand-Drawn SketchÂes of BroadÂacre City (1932)
How Frank Lloyd Wright’s Son InventÂed LinÂcoln Logs, “America’s NationÂal Toy” (1916)
The ModÂernist Gas StaÂtions of Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe
When Frank Lloyd Wright Designed a DogÂhouse, His SmallÂest ArchiÂtecÂturÂal CreÂation (1956)
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities, the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles and the video series The City in CinÂeÂma. FolÂlow him on TwitÂter at @colinmarshall or on FaceÂbook.
There is a Frank Lloyd Wright gas staÂtion proÂtoÂtypeÂbuilt inside the Pierce Arrow Car MuseÂum in BufÂfaÂlo, NY
There “is a famous house in WisÂconÂsin called “Falling Water” and we used to have a ” Frank Lloyd Wright ArchiÂtecÂture School” in Phoenix AZ., named after him where peoÂple studyÂing to be archiÂtects would come and apprenÂtidÂce posÂsiÂbly under the Great Master…You can still tour it today.…but I think they unforÂtuÂnateÂly disÂconÂtinÂued the classes.…..Check it out„„„,He made the outÂdoors come inside.….…
I live here in CloÂquet, MN and my car is brought to this gas staÂtion whenÂevÂer aa tune up needÂed. The guys who work here are nice and pretÂty honÂest. I don’t see too many peoÂple sitÂting up in the waitÂing room, I’m not even sure if that is what they knew the was meant for that. Lol My grandÂpa had told me a bit of the hisÂtoÂry of the buildÂing, but it is defÂiÂniteÂly interÂestÂing to learn the bits that he didÂn’t know.