By road, rail, Wright home moved to state

J.B. Hunt donates services for shift to Crystal Bridges

LOWELL - The Bachman Wilson House, a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed home acquired in January by Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, has arrived in Northwest Arkansas after traveling by road and rail from where it was built in Millstone, N.J., 60 years ago.

After weeks of careful disassembly, wrapping and labeling by workers, the 2,800-square-foot house and its contents were loaded onto a J.B. Hunt Transport tractor-trailer and a separate container for transport to the trucking company’s storage facility in Lowell. J.B. Hunt donated its services for the move.

“We’ve moved a lot of neat items, but not such a unique piece of history,” said Eric McGee, senior vice president-transportation for J.B. Hunt. Just in the past year, the trucking company has moved a truckload of human brains for research, as well as lasers for the U.S. Navy and live honeybees.

The tractor-trailer traversed 1 , 235 miles and crossed the state lines of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri to get to Lowell.

The separate container was trucked to Chicago and taken by Norfolk Southern Railway to Kansas City, Mo. The trucking company then picked the container up and transported it to Northwest Arkansas.

The expedition took place over the weekend with the help of two drivers who’ve each logged more than 1 million miles without an accident, McGee said. Today, the pieces will be moved to a hangar at the Northwest Arkansas Regional Airport in Highfill for storage until the site work is complete atCrystal Bridges in Bentonville. Sections will be taken to the site as needed.

Crystal Bridges does not disclose the cost of acquisitions, though the trucking company insured the trailer and container, both 53 feet long, for $450,000 each.

Deconstruction was meticulous, said Dennis Miller, an intermodal director for J.B. Hunt. Intermodal means using multiple modes of transportation for freight.

“I’m told [that] anything and everything is in there,” Miller said of the trailer and container.

Crystal Bridges did not buy the land on which the house used to sit, and the foundation remains on the site.

The Bachman Wilson House’s previous owners, Lawrence and Sharon Tarantino, put the house up for sale after repeated flooding from the nearby Millstown River. The Usonian house is one of about 60 designed by Wright with simplicity and affordability in mind. Abraham Wilson and Gloria Bachmancommissioned Wright to design the house in 1954. Gloria’s brother, Marvin Bachman, was an an apprentice under Wright.

The Tarantinos, one an architect and the other a designer, were adamant about finding a new location for the house that mimicked the natural beauty of its former location. Crystal Bridges’ 120-acre grounds are camouflaged by rare trees and foliage, making it difficult to see the museum from afar, even in the dead of winter. The site selected by the museum for the house isoff the art trail, a short walk from the museum’s south entrance and overlooking Crystal Spring.

With the reconstruction yet to be done, more hard work lies ahead.

Scott Eccleston, director of facilities and grounds for the museum said the rebuild will be completed in two phases: preparation of the site and actual reassembly. The first phase - doing dirt work on the near-half-acre spot and laying the infrastructure - should be done by July 4, he said.

A construction fence and signs have been installed and there’s been some rerouting of trails.

“In the next couple of weeks, you will hear equipment moving out there,” Eccleston said.

The reconstruction and landscaping should be complete sometime in spring 2015.

Northwest Arkansas, Pages 7 on 04/22/2014

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