In the summer of 1941, the Smiths traveled to
Taliesin, Wright's studio near
Spring Green, Wisconsin. There, they met with Wright, who agreed to design a home for them with an initial budget of approximately $9,000.
World War II delayed the project. Melvyn Maxwell Smith was drafted into the Army in February 1942, and served until late in 1945. In the summer of 1946, the Smiths purchased 3.3 acres of hilly, wooded land in Bloomfield Hills for $3,600, which represented their entire savings at that time. They again contacted Wright, and visited with him over the
Labor Day weekend of 1946. After several delays, they received the preliminary house plans from Wright in March 1947. The house was to be 1600 square feet and featured
radiant heating through hot water pipes installed under the floor slab. Like other Wright Usonian home designs, the house also relied on
passive solar energy. The Smiths collaborated with Wright on a number of revisions to the house plans, and developed a close rapport with the architect during the process. Wright agreed to incorporate all of the changes they proposed, and the design was finalized in September 1949. Architect
William Wesley Peters, who served as president of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, wrote that Wright "never had clients who were greater in the sense of love and appreciation than Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Smith. It was a two-way road because the more that came back to Frank Lloyd Wright, the more he gave, so it was a double gain." ==Construction==