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Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

Take a tour of Fallingwater while you're in Pittsburgh!

Not far from the city of Pittsburgh is an architectural masterpiece, drawing in thousands of visitors a year to get a glimpse of its beauty. Learn all you need to know about Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater:

What is Fallingwater?

Fallingwater is a house in southwestern Pennsylvania designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1935. Wright was an American architect who specialized in organic architecture, a philosophy that involved designing his creations in harmony with nature. Fallingwater is his most highly acclaimed work, earning titles such as "the most important building of the 20th century", "the best all-time work of American architecture", and "50 Places of a Lifetime".

Fallingwater sits on top of a waterfall that flows below the house. It was constructed by native sandstone, concrete, steel, glass, and wood by local craftsmen, and was completed in 1937. A guest house was added on in 1939.

Does anyone live in Fallingwater?

The house was originally designed and built for a Pittsburgh department store owner, Edgar J. Kaufmann, Sr., and his family. The Kaufmann family owned Fallingwater from 1937-1963, when Edgar Kaufmann, Jr. donated the property to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy to be used as a museum. Since then, over 5 million people have visited to get a tour of the architectural marvel.

How far is Fallingwater from Pittsburgh?

Fallingwater is a 90 minute drive south of Pittsburgh, located in the Laurel Highlands of Mill Run, Pennsylvania.

Address: Route 381 South, 1491 Mill Run Rd. Mill Run, PA 15464

How can I tour Fallingwater?

Fallingwater offers various tours, which include a one-hour guided house tour, two-hour in-depth tour, brunch tour, and sunset tour. Visitors may also purchase a grounds pass to experience the immediate site surrounding the house.

Fallingwater is open for tours daily (except Wednesdays) from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. mid-March through Thanksgiving weekend. It is open on Saturdays and Sundays in December, the week between Christmas and New Year's Day, weather permitting. Advanced ticket purchase or reservations are always required to visit Fallingwater.

How much does a tour of Fallingwater cost?

Prices vary depending on which tour you select. You can see tour options here .

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Pennsylvania , Tours , UNESCO

Fallingwater.

fallingwater

Designed in 1935 and completed in 1937, it is quite possible that Fallingwater just may be one of the most photographed, videoed, written about and talked about of Frank Lloyd Wright’s designs. It is likely one of the most famous buildings of the 20th century. Built over a waterfall, the house was supposed to serve as a weekend “retreat” for Edgar J. Kaufmann, Sr., the owner of a Pittsburgh, PA department store.

This page may contain affiliate links. See our disclosure about affiliate links here .

tours of fallingwater

Says fallingwater.org : “ Since Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater opened to the public in 1964, over five million visitors have experienced his masterwork .” And, a Wikipedia description says that “… it is listed among Smithsonian’s ‘Life List of 28 Places to See Before You Die ’”. There is also a guest house there that was added to the property in 1939.

This is one of eight Frank Lloyd Wright sites added to the UNESCO World Heritage list. The home was entrusted to the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy in 1963, and Fallingwater opened as a museum the following year.

Location of Fallingwater

1419 Mill Run Rd, Mill Run, PA 15464

Tour Fallingwater

There are a number of different tours available from exterior only to an in-depth guided tour. You can view the tours, rates and book online at Fallingwater.org

Related Products & Links

Fallingwater by Lynda Waggoner (Amazon book)

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tours of fallingwater

Yvonne Carpenter-Ross

Flw enthusiast & webmaster.

Architecture and home design have always fascinated me. As a young girl I enjoyed drawing floor plans, rearranging my parent’s furniture and playing with Lincoln Logs and Legos.  My passion has always been the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. Since I have been old enough to drive a car, I have visited Frank Lloyd Wright homes in the Chicagoland area and attended the Wright Plus house walks. Now, as co-owners of Northern Sky Designs , my husband & I are able to combine our website design skills and FLW travels to bring you this website! Enjoy!

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Laurel Highlands Blog

Your place for insider news, events & activities, a guide to visiting fallingwater.

Friday, March 11, 2022 2:00 PM

The Laurel Highlands region is home to four houses that were designed by architectural genius Frank Lloyd Wright . The most well-known house, Fallingwater , is a bucket list item for many and lives up to the hype. Fallingwater is inscribed as one of 24  UNESCO World Heritage sites  in the U.S. and is listed alongside attractions including the Pyramids of Egypt, the Great Wall of China and the Taj Mahal.

First things first: if you're interested in touring Fallingwater, advance ticket purchase is necessary. To keep tours organized and optimal, you must call ahead at 724-329-8501 or go online to reserve your spot. Tours run from March 11 through November 26, 2023 except Wednesdays, Easter Sunday morning and Thanksgiving.

Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

If you don't know which tour to take, here is a quick rundown of the most common tours and a list of specialty tours:

Guided architectural tour .

On this hour-long tour, you will be led by a knowledgeable, friendly Fallingwater tour guide. This option is most common for first-time visitors. You will walk through all of the main rooms in the house, step out onto the terraces and get to take a look at the guest house. Along the way, you will learn about the history as well as both small and big details of the house. Photography is permitted on the first floor of the house. At the end of your tour, you are free to roam to the "iconic spot" to get a picture of the famous view. Guided house tours are $35 per person and available from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily, except Wednesdays, Easter Sunday morning and Thanksgiving.

In-Depth Guided Tour

This in-depth tour is very similar to the guided house tour, but is an hour and a half instead of one hour. During the in-depth tour, your expert educator guide will share extensive details about the history and architectural design of the house, the landscape, and the art that will help you to better understand the harmony of the landscape and house. Another bonus is that you will get exclusive access to spaces not shown on the guided architectural tour! It includes the self-guided exterior experience and provides full access to the grounds.

Specialty Tours

New for this year is the Guided Grounds Walking Tour, which offers exterior access led by a Fallingwater educator that provides insights into the Bear Run landscape that inspired Wright.

If you're bringing children, Fallingwater offers private one-hour Family Field Trip tours on Tuesdays and Thursdays where children younger than 6 are admitted free. While this $28 tour is exterior-only, it's still a fun yet educational outing for the whole family.

The Forest-to-Table dinner experience provides after-hours interior access and a seasonal culinary experience on April 21, 22; July 14, 15; and Oct. 6,7 for $425 per person.

Focus tours feature exclusive access to the house interior and grounds with a meal on the pottery terrace for $1,800.

Grounds Pass

This is a perfect option if you're on a tight schedule, interior tours are booked, or you just want to explore the beautiful grounds around the home. If you need suggestions for walking routes or places to explore, download Fallingwater's visitor guide and print a copy to bring on your adventure. 

Fallingwater Interior

The Day of Your Fallingwater Tour

Once you've picked your preferred tour and time and purchased your ticket, make sure you arrive about a half hour before your tour time. Not because there will be traffic or you'll get lost, but because there is so much to do before your tour. After parking in the lot, walk to the visitors center and check in at the desk in the center and take note of your group number. 

While you're waiting to hear your group number to be called over the loudspeaker, explore the Visitors Center. Fun fact: Construction of the Visitors Center was overseen by Edgar Kaufmann Jr.'s life partner, Paul Mayén. It was the Kaufmanns' intention to let the public enjoy the house, so what you see and experience at Fallingwater today was influenced by the family.

The Fallingwater Café serves breakfast items, coffee, snacks and drinks as well as delicious, healthy lunch entrées including wraps, salads and sandwiches that are all made in-house with locally sourced ingredients. Fallingwater Café also offers bagged lunches and group lunches in the Meadow if you give them a 48-hour heads up! 

Take a stroll through the Speyer Gallery, featuring two special exhibitions in 2022. "Sacred Spaces: Frank Lloyd Wright and Andrew Pielage,” features photographs captured by Pielage over his decade-long project to document Wright’s work. His work juxtaposes traditional places of worship with iconic Wright houses, museums and civic spaces. a collection of historic photos, materials and film footage of Fallingwater will be on display from April 15 through September 30. The second exhibition, “Frank Lloyd Wright’s Southwestern Pennsylvania: The Fallingwater Projects,” runs from Oct. 15 to Dec. 31 and will feature unbuilt projects Wright designed for the Kaufmann family at Fallingwater, including a chapel, a gate house, and a farmer’s cottage. These unrealized designs will be brought to life as virtual animations and will be exhibited alongside Wright’s architectural drawings.

Be sure to browse the Museum Store for a unique Fallingwater or Frank Lloyd Wright souvenir and other treasures. Lastly, take advantage of the restrooms located at the Visitors Center before your tour starts. There are no public restrooms once you leave the Visitors Center. Once your group number is called, you will gather on the ramp leading to the house and you're off!

A few quick tips:

  • If you're visiting during July, August or October, be sure to buy your tickets well in advance. Peak season books fast!
  • Allow an extra 15 minutes for driving time if you're not used to rural roads. You can find driving directions and a map on Fallingwater's website .
  • Please keep in mind that pets are not allowed on the grounds or at the Visitors Center, but service animals are welcome to join you on your tour.
  • Make sure you snag a photo or selfie at the famous spot! You know the one. Just follow the arrows on the signage that point toward "View."
  • Help the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy keep Fallingwater beautiful and clean. Please take your trash with you.
  • To prevent anything from being bumped into and knocked over, only small wallets and handheld cameras are allowed inside the house.
  • Dress for the weather and always bring a light jacket. Not only can western Pennsylvania weather change in a matter of minutes, but it's also usually about 10 degrees colder on the mountain.
  • Wear comfortable walking shoes. There is a quarter-mile walk from the visitors center to the house, and there is a lot of exploring to do on the grounds after your tour. 

COVID Policy

At this time, masking is optional but always welcome. Fallingwater encourages visitors to check the COVID-19 Community Level for Fayette County, Pennsylvania, on the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website  for additional recommendations. For more information on Fallingwater’s health and safety guidelines regarding COVID-19, visit  Fallingwater.org/visit/covid-19-policies/ .

Kentuck Knob

Keep in mind that three other Frank Lloyd Wright houses are located near Fallingwater and are worth the detour. Frank Lloyd Wright at Polymath Park, an architectural park that is home to Frank Lloyd Wright's Mäntylä and Duncan House, is only 23 miles away and Frank Lloyd Wright's  Kentuck Knob is less than seven miles down the road from Fallingwater. Even though they were all designed by Wright, they have unique features and different origin stories. Why tour only one when you can see all four!? 

In addition to Frank Lloyd Wright homes, the Laurel Highlands offers outdoor recreation, family fun , expansive wineries , historic sites , and more. Start planning your Laurel Highlands getaway today!

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A 3D Tour of Frank Lloyd Wright's "Fallingwater"

By chris higgins | jul 29, 2014.

Vimeo / Cristóbal Vila

In 1935, architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed Fallingwater , a house atop a waterfall in Pennsylvania. It's a beautiful house, and I've visited it several times to wander around and think, "Yeah, this is what I'd like if I had a gajillion dollars."

Here's one way to experience it from home—a 3D-rendered fly-through showing how the structure is put together. In this video, animator Cristóbal Vila shows us how Fallingwater emerges from the landscape and builds up, plus how cantilevering allows the house to rest on a very unusual foundation. Have a look (and skip to 0:40 if you don't care for opening credits):

Fallingwater from Cristóbal Vila on Vimeo .

For more on the house and its history, here's a half-hour documentary:

Finally, if you're a Fallingwater fan who likes to build things, I recommend the LEGO Fallingwater kit .

Find anything you save across the site in your account

Taliesin West: Everything You Need to Know About Frank Lloyd Wright’s Winter Home and Studio

tours of fallingwater

By Rachel Davies

Taliesin West

Many dash to Illinois to see Frank Lloyd Wright’s prairie-style homes, others fly to Pennsylvania to experience Fallingwater . A trip to Arizona calls for a visit to Taliesin West. The Scottsdale property was the winter home and studio of the acclaimed American architect , from the time he purchased the land in 1937 until his death in 1959. Wright’s Taliesin Fellowship apprentices would “learn by doing” alongside the architect, building up the property from barren desert. Nowadays, a visit to Taliesin West offers the opportunity to experience how the legendary architect’s principles of organic architecture applied to a desert landscape. Below we detail the basics of Taliesin West’s history, elements of its design, and what you need to know about Taliesin West before visiting yourself.

What is Taliesin West?

Taliesin West is a National Historic Landmark and UNESCO World Heritage Site located in Scottsdale, Arizona. It was Frank Lloyd Wright’s winter home and studio. Wright and his apprentices would spend the warmer months at Taliesin, his home and studio in Wisconsin, but when the weather turned cold they would migrate to Taliesin West. Today it is open for tours and a variety of community events, including movie nights, happy hours, and day camps, among other programming. In addition to these public uses, the offices of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation are located on the property.

Taliesin West

History of Taliesin

Five years after founding the Taliesin Fellowship, based out of his Spring Green, Wisconsin, home and studio, Frank Lloyd Wright found a plot of land that would allow himself and his apprentices to head out West every winter. While the cost of heating Taliesin in Wisconsin over the winters is cited as a contributing factor to the Arizona migration, the need for inspiration was another central factor. “He was in search of new catalysts for his imagination,” Roger Friedland and Harold Zellman write in The Fellowship.

As a home base, he purchased hundreds of acres of land in Scottsdale in the foothills of the McDowell Mountains. “In 1937, [Frank Lloyd Wright] came to the site that is Taliesin West and decided that this is where he would want to work to create a desert laboratory,” says Henry Hendrix, vice president of marketing and communications at the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. “From that time, it built up from the desert camp to eventually becoming the series of buildings and supporting buildings that it is today. It [allowed for] a learn-by-doing way of life for Wright and his apprentices.”

Taliesin West

According to Kathryn Smith on Taliesin and Taliesin West, the majority of the first phase of construction—which included the office, drafting room, kitchen, dining room, apartments, and the small theater—was complete by 1940. Life at Taliesin West was scrappy, with apprentices sleeping in tents or small structures of their own design, along with a years-long period without running water, as detailed in The Fellowship. Like Taliesin in Wisconsin, Taliesin West continued to evolve throughout Wright’s lifetime and after his death too.

Today, the Taliesin West property measures roughly 500 acres, with a “historic core” of buildings that date back to Wright’s own lifetime. This core includes the triangular prow, Wright’s living quarters, the garden room and private dining room, the kitchen and an additional dining space, the drafting studio, the board room and the William Wesley Peterson conference room, Wright’s office, the music pavilion, and the cabaret.

It was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 2019.

Architectural details of Taliesin West

Taliesin West is defined by its site-specific “desert masonry.” As detailed in The Fellowship, walls and other structural elements were crafted by pouring a mixture of cement, sand, and quartzite rocks in wood forms. This work—handling the heavy quartzite in particular—was an especially laborious task. In the early days of Taliesin West, rather than a proper solid roof, canvas was stretched across redwood beams, allowing Wright and the apprentices to roll them up when more light was needed or pull them across to minimize heat and protect from rain. Still, the material wasn’t leakproof and it was eventually replaced with glass and acrylic panels, in some cases. After years in the heat, the wood showed its age and was reinforced with steel and painted red.

Taliesin West

Wright chose the name Taliesin, meaning “shining brow” in Welsh, for his Wisconsin property because he chose to site the home on the brow of the hill rather than directly atop it. Extending that sensitivity to his site in Arizona, he chose the locations for the buildings of Taliesin West so that they would complement the McDowell Mountains. The experience of Taliesin West is as much about the exterior spaces as it is the interior, with walkways and terraces connecting one building to the next.

Interior design of Taliesin West

The interiors of Taliesin West frame the landscape, giving visitors a greater appreciation for its site. “Wright’s work was very intentional,” Hendrix says. “He has built-in furniture here because you’re supposed to sit and absorb that view from that particular angle while sitting down…. He wanted people to sit and look and absorb and be inspired.” In Hendrix’s experience, the desert environment is one of the things people remark upon most when first visiting Taliesin West—a testament to Wright’s commitment to the ideals of organic architecture. “The distance in views, what you can see here, just the beauty of it and how everything fits together—I think that’s what the first time visitor experiences,” Hendrix says.

Generally speaking, the colors in the interiors match the landscape, with reds, greens, and yellow details appearing inside. These colors play off of the color variations in the stone of the desert masonry, which makes up many of the interior walls too. The furniture in the spaces that visitors will view on tours are reproductions of original Wright-designed furniture to reduce wear and tear on original designs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Taliesin West

According to Humanities , the magazine of the National Endowment for the Humanities, Frank Lloyd Wright purchased the 800 acres of land for $3.50 an acre—a total of $2,800. Of course, this cost does not include the expense of making this land liveable. One major cost was paying a well digger to bring running water to Taliesin West, which cost $10,000 according to The Fellowship.

The cost of visiting Taliesin West varies depending on which specific tour you choose. As of 2024, the Highlights Audio Tour costs $44 for adults, $31 for students, and $22 for youth ages 6 to 12. The In-Depth Guided Tour costs $54 for adults, $38 for students, or $27 for youth ages 6 to 12. Other tour opportunities, and their associated costs, vary from year to year.

The self-guided Highlights Audio Tour lasts roughly 90 minutes, while the In-Depth Guided Tour takes one hour. The length of other tour options varies. The tours offer different ways of experiencing the property, allowing you to choose the way you wish to engage with the property. “The beauty of the audio tour is that it allows you to kind of move through these spaces at your own pace, so if you want to linger in the garden room a little bit longer, or even when you’re in the drafting studio you can [linger,] versus the guided tour [that] would move you through the spaces,” Hendrix explains. The Taliesin West property also includes the Frank Lloyd Wright Store, which visitors may spend varying amounts of time visiting prior or following their tour.

Since Frank Lloyd Wright’s death in 1959, Taliesin West has been owned by the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation.

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Tennis

Tennis Briefing: Djokovic, a water bottle, and so many injuries in Rome

Tennis Briefing: Djokovic, a water bottle, and so many injuries in Rome

Welcome to the Monday Tennis Briefing, where The Athletic  will explain the story behind the stories from the last week on court. This week, the coveted Masters 1000 in Rome ran its first week and the stories on court were matched by the drama off it. Novak Djokovic exited,   struck by a water bottle , Rafael Nadal took the next step in his comeback, and the on-court spectacle was overtaken by some strange umpiring.

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Are all these injuries signal or noise?

Friday lunchtime in Rome and the Foro Italico briefly felt like an infirmary, as one medical bulletin followed another.

First, defending champion Elena Rybakina withdrew because of illness, before the first matches of the day on the Campo Centrale and Pietrangeli courts ended in retirements: Lorenzo Musetti (virus) on the former, Anna Blinkova (ankle) on the latter.

Later in the day, world No 7 Casper Ruud battled a back problem in his defeat to Miomir Kecmanovic, who had a similar injury and said afterwards that he took three kinds of pills to numb the pain.

The Italian Open had already seen two of the men’s favourites , Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz , pull out with fitness issues before it had begun. Defending champion Daniil Medvedev arrived carrying an issue in his upper leg. Elsewhere on Friday, Dominic Thiem announced he would retire later in the year because of his long-standing wrist problem.

So, does tennis have an issue with injuries?

It was a talking point throughout the first week in Rome and Danielle Collins , who benefited from Blinkova’s retirement, told The Athletic after the match that this kind of situation is an occupational hazard given tennis’s relentless schedule.

tours of fallingwater

“It’s to be expected when we have this many tournaments back to back to back,” she said. “It’s a physical sport and when people are going far and playing lots of matches, injuries and illnesses will pop up.

“I’m not surprised. It’s a long season — everyone deals with injuries or illness during the season.”

A couple of days earlier, Medvedev played down the withdrawals: “Injuries, in general, are coincidence unless it’s the same injury for everyone.”

Grigor Dimitrov, the world No 10 and a relative veteran at 32, offered a different perspective: “We’ve seen a lot more retirements in the last two and a half years because the sport is a lot more demanding.”

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How to fix tennis

Can Kerber and Osaka crack the comeback (on clay?)

Naomi Osaka and Angelique Kerber are really good tennis players, and giving birth wasn’t going to change that.

That doesn’t mean coming back is easy. Tennis protects rankings during maternity leave, but unseeded players can get thrown to the wolves in the early rounds of tournaments and struggle to find wins when they need them most. Osaka and Kerber have been dealing with that these past months, showing flashes of their past Grand Slam-winning selves, but also periods of inconsistency that can spell doom in two-of-three-set tennis.

tours of fallingwater

But in Rome, Kerber is back in another Masters 1000 round of 16, where she will have her work cut out against Iga Swiatek, the world No 1. Reaching the second week already counts as a victory for Kerber, who is only in month five of her comeback. With her best career results on grass and hard courts, she’s not a player any seed wants to face this summer.

Osaka’s coach, Wim Fissette set her the goal of returning to form for this year’s hard swing in North America, but Osaka is famously impatient and newly redoubtable on the red stuff. Rome has arguably been her best week, with wins over Marta Kostyuk, one of the best players this year, and Daria Kasatkina, maybe the world’s smartest player. Next up was Australian Open finalist Zheng Qinwen, who is 21 years old and relished the match-up, taking out an errant Osaka in straight sets.

That defeat doesn’t discredit Osaka’s commitment to improving on a surface she normally doesn’t relish at all. Osaka lost early in Madrid and went to Mallorca to train before Rome. “I watched some videos,” she said. “I watched Rafa. I watched Alcaraz. I watched Rublev, which is very inspiring. He’s smacking the ball and I thought, ‘I don’t want to have regrets when I leave the court’. In Madrid, I did have regrets of not swinging fully.”

No regrets? Sounds good.

Out in the tramlines: Should umpires be part of the show?

The rise of electronic line calling (ELC) means that umpires are increasingly peripheral figures in tennis.

Clay is slightly different, with tournaments, including the Italian Open, still relying on them popping off their chairs to inspect ball marks.

During a tight final set between British world No 67 Dan Evans and home favourite Fabio Fognini on Thursday night, Fognini scooped a forehand drive volley short and wide — too wide. The line judge responsible for the singles sideline initially put out an arm to stipulate it was out; the Hawk-Eye evidence indicated it was out; umpire Mohamed Lahyani insisted it was not.

“You couldn’t show me the mark, the ball didn’t hit the f*****g line,” as Evans put it.

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Lahyani insisted during the argument that the line judge had called the ball in, which appeared not to be the case. The incident came a year after Evans’ compatriot Andy Murray got in a similar argument with Lahyani — against the same opponent and at the same tournament.

The back-and-forth continued, and Evans was given a code violation warning for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Some would argue this wasn’t entirely coincidental. Lahyani is happy to get involved in matches — sometimes too much, like six years ago when he gave Nick Kyrgios a mid-match pep talk, subsequently earning a suspension from the ATP. In Rome, there was the surreal sight of Lahyani getting mobbed by spectators on the grounds of the Foro Italico. Officials are generally not revered in this way, and at last year’s tournament, Djokovic took the umpire to task for it, asking him “what is the drama” and “are you acting here” during a row over calling the score.

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Rublev's default in Dubai is exactly why tennis needs electronic line calling

Why did so many people think someone threw a bottle at Djokovic?

The widespread assumption on Friday night that Djokovic had been deliberately rather than accidentally struck by a water bottle broadly came about for a couple of reasons.

The first was that the original footage made it look that way.

The second, and more revealing, reason is that someone hating Djokovic enough to lob a bottle at him didn’t seem especially far-fetched . And maybe those preconceptions informed why so many assumed it was deliberate from the jump — not just his most dedicated fans, but tennis social media aggregators, figureheads, and Boris Becker.

Djokovic’s divisiveness is well-documented, with an army of supporters and his litany of staggering achievements not belying a huge number of detractors. Without re-litigating all that here, the hostility originally stemmed from the rivalry he enjoyed with the largely beloved Nadal and Roger Federer.

It has intensified over the last few years.

tours of fallingwater

He has arguably surpassed both in terms of achievement with comparatively little fanfare; his decision not to get the Covid-19 vaccine, which he always stressed was a personal choice, has invited opprobrium and unwittingly made him a poster boy for groups who believe that choice is a victory against the establishment.

There have been other controversies — at the Australian Open last year, his father was pictured with Vladimir Putin supporters; in the first week of last year’s French Open, he wrote “Kosovo is the (heart symbol) of Serbia” on a television camera in response to violent clashes in Kosovo, putting himself once more in the middle of a battle that has plagued the Balkans for nearly 1,000 years and drawing accusations of aligning himself with fascism and philosophies that led to ethnic cleansing.

Djokovic said both were misinterpreted.

Thankfully Djokovic wasn’t attacked on Friday and, by the following day, he was making light of the incident, arriving at the Foro Italico wearing a bike helmet before his defeat to Alejandro Tabilo.

go-deeper

Novak Djokovic was a lightning rod a year ago - now he is royalty

No-shot of the week

Club players of the world: does this look familiar?

Left on purpose, @dThiagoMonteiro 😉 #IBI24 pic.twitter.com/dEzRP3Mk8N — Tennis TV (@TennisTV) May 8, 2024

Shot of the week

Oh no he didn't… 😱 @dThiagoMonteiro with one of the shots of the week in Rome! #IBI24 pic.twitter.com/4WB864fuZS — Tennis TV (@TennisTV) May 10, 2024

Recommended reading:

  • Why Swiatek and Sabalenka’s Madrid epic was bigger than the two of them
  • Ben Shelton interview: “I didn’t want to be one of 50 Nike guys”
  • Jury orders USTA to pay $9m in assault case
  • Rafael Nadal, 22-time Grand Slam champion, meet Rafael Nadal, world No 305

📅 Coming up

🎾  ATP: 

📍Rome, Italian Open (1000) second week, ft. Stefanos Tstitsipas, Alejandro Tabilo, Thiago Monteiro, Grigor Dimitrov 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel 💻 Tennis TV

📍Rome, Italian Open (1000) second week, ft. Iga Swiatek, Aryna Sabalenka, Elena Rybakina, Coco Gauff. 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel

Tell us what you noticed this week in the comments as the tours continue.

(Top photos: Mike Hewitt; Alex Pantling; Dan Isitene/Getty Images)

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tours of fallingwater

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Virtual Experiences

Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, located in Mill Run, PA

Fallingwater From Home

From activities for kids and families to resources for teachers, you will enjoy these Fallingwater experiences anytime, anywhere from home. More

A Closer Look

A Closer Look

"A Closer Look" is a weekly live broadcast series held every Wednesday through which you will gain special access to spaces, objects, stories and information that are not included on our architectural tours. More

Fallingwater

Free Webinars

We offer free monthly webinars on a variety of topics related to Fallingwater to provide you with more information and insight. More

Virtual Summer Camps

Virtual Summer Camps

Through this online program, high school students learn about Fallingwater and Frank Lloyd Wright’s design philosophy while preparing for the college application process. More

Privacy Overview

COMMENTS

  1. Fallingwater Tours

    Fallingwater, a National Historic Landmark and a site inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, is open for the 61 st tour season with a variety of experiences for visitors to gain insights into Wright's organic architecture and design philosophy, and discover the beauty of Fallingwater and its natural landscape.. Gate open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily

  2. Visit Fallingwater

    Tour tickets may be cancelled or exchanged up to 48 hours prior to the date of the tour, but are subject to a $5.00 service fee. Tickets are non-refundable within 48 hours of the tour date. Visit the Frank Lloyd Wright masterpiece, nestled within the lush, wooded Bear Run Nature Reserve. A timeless monument to organic architecture at its best.

  3. Fallingwater

    Fallingwater is located in a VERY rural area, so be extremely careful with your directions. After getting lost, we showed up late for our reservations, and the kind people allowed us to join a later tour. All tours were sold out that day, so we were extremely appreciative to the understanding staff!

  4. Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

    Fallingwater was added to the UNESCO World Heritage List in July 2019. Open to the public for house tours, Fallingwater is the only remaining Frank Lloyd Wright house with its setting, original furnishings and artwork intact. Fallingwater offers a one-hour Guided Architectural tour (includes the main floor of the house, the terraces and the ...

  5. Guide to Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

    Fallingwater is open for tours daily (except Wednesdays) from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. mid-March through Thanksgiving weekend. It is open on Saturdays and Sundays in December, the week between Christmas and New Year's Day, weather permitting. Advanced ticket purchase or reservations are always required to visit Fallingwater.

  6. Frank Lloyd Wright Tours

    Kentuck Knob - A Mountaintop Gem. Less than ten miles from Fallingwater sits Frank Lloyd Wright's mountain house, Kentuck Knob. Built in the early fifties on a bluff 2,050 feet above sea level, the home stands just below the crest of the mountain that it was named after. This one story Usonian home was designed on a hexagonal module.

  7. Fallingwater

    Location of Fallingwater. 1419 Mill Run Rd, Mill Run, PA 15464. Tour Fallingwater. There are a number of different tours available from exterior only to an in-depth guided tour. You can view the tours, rates and book online at Fallingwater.org. Related Products & Links. Fallingwater by Lynda Waggoner (Amazon book)

  8. A Guide to Touring Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater

    A Guide to Visiting Fallingwater. Friday, March 11, 2022 2:00 PM. The Laurel Highlands region is home to four houses that were designed by architectural genius Frank Lloyd Wright. The most well-known house, Fallingwater, is a bucket list item for many and lives up to the hype. Fallingwater is inscribed as one of 24 UNESCO World Heritage sites ...

  9. FALLINGWATER

    On this architecture tour from Downtown Pittsburgh, enjoy convenient travel to this impressive 20th century home, spanning a waterfall in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Mountains. After a ride by private vehicle, tour the sight, and enjoy views of waterfalls on your return trip. Visit Fallingwater, one of Frank Lloyd Wright's architectural achievements.

  10. Pittsburgh-Pennsylvania Tour

    Fallingwater - America's UNESCO World Heritage Masterpiece. The Most Unique Home in the World. Fallingwater stands as one of the greatest architectural triumphs of the 20th Century. Let me take you to its location astride Bear Run in the Laurel Highlands of the Allegheny Mountains. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright for Pittsburgh businessman Edgar ...

  11. Fallingwater Tours

    Fallingwater Tours. Fallingwater, a National Historic Landmark and a site inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List, is open for the 60 th tour season with a variety of experiences for visitors to gain insights into Wright's organic architecture and design philosophy, and discover the beauty of Fallingwater and its natural landscape.

  12. Fallingwater Full Walkthrough Tour in 4K // Frank Lloyd Wright

    Join Alice and Tommy T as they provide you a 2021 full walkthrough tour of Fallingwater near Ohiopyle State Park. Fallingwater, a National Historic Landmark ...

  13. Fallingwater Homepage

    Fallingwater Homepage - Fallingwater. Fallingwater News. Experience Fallingwater, now open for our 61st tour season. Attend Fallingwater Fireside: May 9, Aug. 27 and Sept. 26. Learn about spring 2024 preservation work underway. Tour two more Wright-designed houses at nearby Polymath Park. Plan Your Visit.

  14. FALLINGWATER

    Falling Water was a rainy day that added to the experience IMO. The water levels were high and being indoors the atmosphere was cozy and warm while the rains pounded the surrounding area. Just breathtakingly amazing. ... I recommend the IN-depth Tour of Fallingwater which is more expensive BUT worth every extra penny. The $350 Tour is the round ...

  15. Fallingwater Tours

    Fallingwater Tour. Discover the natural splendor of the Laurel Highlands with an architectural tour of Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater House. Sitting atop a Pennsylvania waterfall, this UNESCO World Heritage Site is a unique landmark boasting open-air walkways and incredible terraces rooted in nature's forms and principles.

  16. A 3D Tour of Frank Lloyd Wright's "Fallingwater"

    A 3D Tour of Frank Lloyd Wright's "Fallingwater". In 1935, architect Frank Lloyd Wright designed Fallingwater, a house atop a waterfall in Pennsylvania. It's a beautiful house, and I've visited it ...

  17. Taliesin West: Everything You Need to Know About Frank Lloyd Wright's

    As of 2024, the Highlights Audio Tour costs $44 for adults, $31 for students, and $22 for youth ages 6 to 12. The In-Depth Guided Tour costs $54 for adults, $38 for students, or $27 for youth ages ...

  18. THE BEST Things to Do in Valuyevo

    Things to Do in Valuyevo, Russia: See Tripadvisor's 121 traveler reviews and photos of Valuyevo tourist attractions. Find what to do today, this weekend, or in March. We have reviews of the best places to see in Valuyevo. Visit top-rated & must-see attractions.

  19. 1023 Falling Water Dr SE, Smyrna, GA 30080

    Zillow has 14 photos of this $275,000 3 beds, 4 baths, 2,214 Square Feet townhouse home located at 1023 Falling Water Dr SE, Smyrna, GA 30080 built in 1983. MLS #7367519.

  20. Visitor Information

    Only small wallets and handheld cameras are permitted on tour. For the protection of Fallingwater and its collections, handbags larger than 10x10x3 inches (25x25x8cm), backpacks of any size, camera bags, tripods and other cumbersome items are prohibited inside Fallingwater and must be left in vehicles or placed in lockers at the Visitor Center ...

  21. Polymath Park Tours

    Polymath Park is a separate property that is independently owned and operated, located at 187 Evergreen Lane, Acme, PA 15610, approximately 23 miles from Fallingwater and just 5 miles from Exit 91 (Donegal) on the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Wright at Polymath Park tours run from March 22 through November 24, 2024, except Wednesdays.

  22. Tennis Briefing: Djokovic, a water bottle, and so many injuries in Rome

    Falling water bottles, umpire drama, injuries and shock exits: One normal week of tennis in Rome

  23. SANATORIUM VALUYEVO

    64 reviews. Location 4.2. Cleanliness 3.5. Service 3.7. Value 3.6. The sanatorium "Valuevo" is a historical health resort located in a unique location of the New Moscow on the territory of 30 hectares of the ancient noble estate of Count Musin-Pushkin with a perfectly preserved architectural ensemble and a landscape park, in an ecologically ...

  24. Elektrostal

    In 1938, it was granted town status. [citation needed]Administrative and municipal status. Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is incorporated as Elektrostal City Under Oblast Jurisdiction—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, Elektrostal City Under Oblast Jurisdiction is incorporated as Elektrostal Urban Okrug.

  25. ALLIANCE

    Alliance. 1 review. #1 of 1 small hotel in Zheleznodorozhny. Gidrogorodok St., 3, Zheleznodorozhny 143982 Russia. Write a review. Have you been to Alliance?

  26. Virtual Experiences

    Fallingwater From Home From activities for kids and families to resources for teachers, you will enjoy these Fallingwater experiences anytime, anywhere from home. More A Closer Look "A Closer Look" is a weekly live broadcast series held every Wednesday through which you will gain special access to spaces, objects, stories and information that are not... View Article