After the Depression, America's most famous architect turned to a question most famous architects ignore: what does a moderate-income family deserve? His answer was the Usonian house, beginning with the Jacobs House in Madison, Wisconsin in 1937, built for roughly $5,500 for a newspaper reporter and his family.
Usonians were small, single-storey homes on concrete slabs with radiant heat. No attic, no basement, no dining room, no garage. Wright replaced the garage with a covered shelter he named the carport, a word he coined. Every deletion was a design decision: cut what a family does not use, spend what is left on light, material, and the connection to the land.
What we take: subtraction is design. Delete the rooms nobody lives in, keep the dignity.

