Born on March 31, 1890, Frank Lloyd Wright Jr. was the eldest son of renowned architect
Frank Lloyd Wright and Wright's first wife, Catherine Lee "Kitty" Tobin Wright. He spent his early years at his
father's home and studio in
Oak Park, Illinois. Wright briefly attended the
University of Wisconsin in
Madison for two years of coursework in
agronomy and
engineering before traveling extensively through Europe after his father moved to Italy in 1909. In 1911, Wright joined the landscape firm
Olmsted and Olmsted in
Boston, Massachusetts, where he specialized in
botany and
horticulture. Wright was later sent to
San Diego, California, to assist with the landscape design of the 1915
Panama–California Exposition with architects
Bertram Goodhue,
Carleton Winslow, and
Irving Gill. The exposition's principal buildings and gardens still remain in
Balboa Park. Landscape design led him to work with Los Angeles architect
William J. Dodd, and in San Diego with Irving Gill, the latter another master architect and mentor to his design career. In the mid-1910s, Wright formed a landscape partnership with
Paul Thiene, a colleague from the Olmsted firm, before opening his own practice in 1916. The house was commissioned by the oil heiress and philanthropist
Aline Barnsdall. Wright began his independent career in 1920. In 1922, he was a production designer at
Paramount Studios, responsible for the extensive castle and 12th-century village sets for the
Douglas Fairbanks version of
Robin Hood. In December 1922, Wright prepared plans for the Henry Bollman House in Hollywood that included a repeated pattern of concrete blocks, a precursor to his father's more famous
"textile block" houses in the Los Angeles area. From 1923 through 1926, the younger Wright was drawn into the realization of these four houses, and the ambitious attempt to evolve the "textile block" system into a patented construction technique. The first was the 1923
Millard House in
Pasadena, California, where Lloyd designed the grounds, and contributed an adjacent studio building in 1926. Lloyd served as construction manager for the other three: the
Storer House (1923), the
Samuel Freeman House (1923), and the
Ennis House (1924). By all accounts Lloyd's work was difficult as he shuttled back and forth between sites, communicating with his father via telegram, and receiving little constructive support from
Taliesin. ==Independent work==