The Rise and Fall of Buffalo's Curious Telescope Houses

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© David Schalliol

One of the most fascinating things about vernacular architecture is that, while outsiders may find a certain city fascinating, local residents might be barely aware of the quirks of their own surroundings. In this photographic study from Issue 4 of Satellite Magazine, originally titled "The Telescope Houses of Buffalo, New York," David Schalliol investigates the unusual extended dwellings of New York State's second-largest city.

The first time I visited Buffalo, New York, I was there to photograph the great buildings of the city’s late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century expansion for the Society of Architectural Historians: monumental buildings designed by Louis Sullivan, Fellheimer & Wagner, and, later, Frank Lloyd Wright. Many of these architects were the period’s leading designers, outsiders from Chicago and New York City hired to announce the arrival of this forward-looking city at the connection of Lake Erie and the Erie Canal.

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Cite: David Schalliol. "The Rise and Fall of Buffalo's Curious Telescope Houses" 10 Aug 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/771613/the-rise-and-fall-of-buffalos-curious-telescope-houses> ISSN 0719-8884

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