A Tour of the Final Home Designed By Frank Lloyd Wright: The Circular Sun House

Some remember the nineteen-nineties in America as the second coming of the nineteen-fifties. Whatever holes one can poke in that historical framing, it does feel strangely plausible inside Frank Lloyd Wright’s Circular Sun House. Though not actually built until 1967, it was commissioned from Wright by shipping magnate Norman Lykes in 1959, the last year of the architect’s life. Almost dated though it may have looked by the time of its completion, supervised by Wright’s apprentice John Rattenbury, it would have accrued some retro cachet over the subsequent decades. Then, in the renovation-mad nineties, the house’s owners brought Rattenbury back out to do a thorough update and remodel.
The result is a kind of hybrid fifties-nineties aesthetic, which will suit some tastes better than others. But then, so do all the residences designed by Wright, of which the Circular Sun House in Phoenix, Arizona, is the very last.
In the Architectural Digest video above, posted when the house went on the market in 2021, real estate agent Deanna Peters points out a few of its Wrightian features: its circular form, but also its curved hallways, its custom-built cabinetry (Philippine mahogany, of course), its signature “compression-and-release” and “inside-out” spatial effects, its cantilevered balcony, its integration with the desert environment, and even its carport — Wright’s own coinage, and indeed his own invention.
Also in the manner of most Wright-designed homes — as he himself was known to acknowledge, and not without a boastful note — the Circular Sun House seems easier to look at than to live in, let alone maintain. “The 3‑bedroom home last sold in 2019, before it had a brief period on Airbnb (rented for approximately $1,395 a night),” wrote Homes & Gardens’ Megan Slack in 2023. At that time, it was on the market for $8.5 million, about half a million dollars more than its owner wanted in 2021. Paradoxically, though it remains unsold as of this writing, its asking price has risen to $8,950,000. Wright’s name brings a certain premium, of course, but so do the trends of the moment: one hears, after all, that the nineties are back.
Related content:
130+ Photographs of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Masterpiece Fallingwater
A Beautiful Visual Tour of Tirranna, One of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Remarkable, Final Creations
Take a 360° Virtual Tour of Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Personal Home & Studio
Inside the Beautiful Home Frank Lloyd Wright Designed for His Son (1952)
What Frank Lloyd Wright’s Unusual Windows Tell Us About His Architectural Genius
Based in Seoul, Colin Marshall writes and broadcasts on cities, language, and culture. His projects include the Substack newsletter Books on Cities and the book The Stateless City: a Walk through 21st-Century Los Angeles. Follow him on the social network formerly known as Twitter at @colinmarshall.