Mobile Home? (Metropolis)
In 1987 philanthropists Mike and Penny Winton decided that they needed a guesthouse to complement their Philip Johnson-designed home in Orono, Minnesota. In 2007 owner-developer Kirt Woodhouse decided that the University of St. Thomas needed that same guesthouse for its Daniel C. Gainey Conference Center campus in Owatonna, Minnesota. In the 20 years since the Wintons hired an up-and-coming Santa Monica-based architect sho seemed to be onto something with his use of vernacular materials and mishmash approach to buildings, the name Frank Gehry has gone beyond household, and the guesthouse has become more than just a place to sleep.
The Winton Guest House comprises a 2,300-square-foot collection of
discrete shapes that form one building (one can see in its separate cohesion a
precursor for Mississippi’s Ohr-O’Keefe Museum). It is clad in brick, plywood,
and black and galvanized sheet metal—the same types of materials Gehry used on
his own Santa Monica home, the design that launched the Frank O. Gehry Associates
frenzy.