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http://columbus.bizjournals.com/columbus/stories/2006/08/07/focus6.html 

 

Worthington's Rush Creek market going strong

Business First of Columbus - August 4, 2006

by Matt Burns Business First

 

After decades as a well-kept Worthington secret, the shaded suburban enclave of Rush Creek Village has a real estate market that defies convention as much as the houses themselves.

 

Recent sale prices are breaking Rush Creek records, said Cynthia MacKenzie, a resident and sales agent for HER Real Living Inc. in Worthington who handles most neighborhood sales. All neighborhood sales since 2002 have closed above $250,000, but two this year hit or topped $400,000, selling for about $190 per square foot when the average Central Ohio home sold for $102 per square foot in 2005.

 

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this neighborhood is famous in modernist circles. i urge anyone who visits columbus and has a little time to take a look around.

  • 11 months later...

Rare opportunity

Four homes are available in Rush Creek Village, where turnover is almost glacial

Sunday,  July 15, 2007 3:55 AM

By Kevin Kidder

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

With Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired straight lines, geometric shapes and floor-to-ceiling windows, the 45 homes of Rush Creek Village are distinct enough to be on the National Register of Historic Places.

 

The homes are carved into the Worthington woods. Many of the roofs are flat, the interiors contemporary and austere.

 

...

 

http://dispatch.com/dispatch/content/home_garden/stories/2007/07/15/RUSH_CREEK.ART_ART_07-15-07_H1_P678IQU.html

^ wow absolute bargains for these joints.

 

i wish someone of us would drive thru there with a camera sometime and do a nice long photo thread.

Wood Panels mixed with concrete? Ew. Looks more like a Frank Lloyd Wrong to me. But its just further proof that well planned neighborhoods (although I don't think its very walkable) retain there value; just look at how Hyde Park and Mariemont retained their wealth and are still growing.

Wood Panels mixed with concrete? Ew. Looks more like a Frank Lloyd Wrong to me. But its just further proof that well planned neighborhoods (although I don't think its very walkable) retain there value; just look at how Hyde Park and Mariemont retained their wealth and are still growing.

 

That's the 60's for ya.

Wood Panels mixed with concrete? Ew. Looks more like a Frank Lloyd Wrong to me. But its just further proof that well planned neighborhoods (although I don't think its very walkable) retain there value; just look at how Hyde Park and Mariemont retained their wealth and are still growing.

 

That's the 60's for ya.

 

yeah and i rec that when he sees a 'design within reach' shop he keeps walkin.

 

I have a lot of time on my hands this summer I think I'll go to this 'hood and take pics.

  • 1 year later...

Rush Creek Village is a tiny enclave consisting of about 50 homes inspired by Frank Lloyd Wright. When the leaves are out, it’s hard to see some of the homes since they tend to be setback among the trees. Best times to go check it out are early spring to fall.

 

MAP

 

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Fascinating!  Didn't know about this place; thanks for the photos!

Great photos Columbusite.  You do have a knack for finding Columbus' out-of-the-way locales! 

 

Although Rush Creek Village is becoming more and more well known in central Ohio (and outside too).  That San Diego article was a good find.  The New York Times also ran an article around 2004 called "Obscurity Becomes It".

Interesting.

"You don't just walk into a bar and mix it up by calling a girl fat" - buildingcincinnati speaking about new forumers

One more thing about Rush Creek Village.  The Columbus Landmarks Foundation holds guided walking tours every year.  Usually Rush Creek Village is on the summer tour.  Here's the link for this year's 2009 WALKING TOURS.  It looks like they have the walking tours schedule through June listed on their website.  Check back for the later summer tours and Rush Creek will probably be listed.

 

I went on the Rush Creek Village tour in Summer 2005.  It was sold-out with 60+ people and divided into two groups.  Two local architects led the tour - one for each tour group.  We looked at approx. 25 houses on the exterior and 2 homes on the interior.  The interior tours were a real treat!  Very informative! 

 

Definately recommend the tour if you are interested and can take walking long distances (it was about 2 miles and 3 hours long).  Here's the general CLF link: http://columbuslandmarks.org/

Awesome. This is the ONLY thing I like about Worthington.

lol - oh come on. harsh! i know what you mean, but strolling around the square is nice too. old bag o nails? chatelaine?, etc.?

 

rush creek is actually pretty famous modernist housing real estate. you see articles about it from time to time. very cool that you can get these kinds of homes relatively inexpensively, if you are into it. i'd love one, but imagine they are a lot of work.

Okay: I find Rush Creek Village to be the only architecturally interesting aspect of Worthington.

don't be so coy -- rush creek is the only architecturally interesting aspect of central ohio.  :wink:

neat area

It's in Worthington? I thought it was more Clintonville-ish.

The map he posted shows it to be real close to Worthington's town square.

Thanks for the pics, this is really cool. 

The map he posted shows it to be real close to Worthington's town square.

 

Wow, I was way off.

Great pics! I love this place. The houses are so spread apart; you must have spent a lot of time out there, taking these. Thanks.

 

 

Okay: I find Rush Creek Village to be the only architecturally interesting aspect of Worthington.

 

Take that back!!

 

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Another great tour, thanks!

Awesome! I think that it's a very cool little village of FLW inspiration indeed!

Great pics! I love this place. The houses are so spread apart; you must have spent a lot of time out there, taking these. Thanks.

 

 

Okay: I find Rush Creek Village to be the only architecturally interesting aspect of Worthington.

 

Take that back!!

 

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Meh. Meh.

Awesome!

 

This is really cool, kinda reminds me of Oakwood with a modern spin. Is this place really as isolated as it seems?

It's half a mile from downtown Worthington pictured above.

  • 1 year later...

Couples faced, overcame myriad obstacles in quest to build in Worthington's historic Rush Creek

Sunday, December 5, 2010 

By Jim Weiker

THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

When two couples decided to build on the last empty lots in Worthington's famed Rush Creek neighborhood, they knew it would be difficult.  Just not this difficult.  They have met a special set of obstacles in their attempt to build in a neighborhood cherished by fans of modern architecture.

 

As part of their quest, they tracked down the 90-year-old original Rush Creek designer in Pennsylvania, navigated a labyrinthine set of land ownership rules and dug up a 1963 Christmas card to help make their case to neighbors.

 

Now, more than five years after embarking on their plan, the couples - Brian and Elizabeth Seitz and Randy and Karen James - are filling in the last blank spots in Rush Creek, the nation's most extensive collection of homes inspired by the "organic architecture" principles of Frank Lloyd Wright.

 

MORE: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/home_garden/stories/2010/12/05/hammering-it-out.html?sid=101

 

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Homes planned for the last two lots in Rush Creek Village mimic many of the village's design features such as flat roofs, walls of glass and exposed concrete block.

  • 2 weeks later...

Theodore van Fossen | 1919-2010

Architect designed Rush Creek Village

He integrated style of Frank Lloyd Wright in Worthington

Tuesday, December 21, 2010 

By Jim Weiker, THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

 

Theodore van Fossen, a laborer for Frank Lloyd Wright who went on to design almost 50 homes in Rush Creek Village in Worthington, has died at age 91.  A resident of the Johnstown, Pa., area, van Fossen died Dec. 9.

 

From 1954 to 1976, Van Fossen designed 48 homes in the village, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

 

MORE: http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/local_news/stories/2010/12/21/architect-designed-rush-creek-village.html?sid=101

its funny how the local media does a rush creek story evry once in awhile like clockwork, ha, but i always enjoy it thx! i didnt know that some of the homes were built as late as the mid-70's, i thought all of them were jet-age. interesting.

 

 

  • 4 months later...

One of the more prominent homes in Worthington's Rush Creek Village is up for sale.  And its got its own website at http://rushcreekroundhouse.com/.

 

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NOW OFFERED FOR SALE IN RUSH CREEK VILLAGE

The Round House

510 Evergreen Circle, Worthington, Ohio 43085

 

And it can all be yours for only $799,000!  Or you can look at the beautiful slideshow at the website for free.

  • 2 years later...

Hello, I live in one of the homes in Rush Creek Village. I am interested in opening my home to visitors to stay here for a weekend or a week at a time for next to nothing while I travel. Email me if interested and I'll explain the details: flw dot fan dot 2000 at gmail dot com

  • 7 years later...

The original Rush Creek home in Worthington for sale after major renovations:

 

https://www.thisweeknews.com/story/lifestyle/home-garden/2021/05/16/worthington-ohio-landmark-frank-lloyd-wright-style-home-rush-creek/4994780001/

 

The home was completed by Martha and Richard Wakefield in 1957 and served as the inspiration for what would become Rush Creek Village in Worthington - which grew to become the nation's largest collection of homes in the style of Frank Lloyd Wright's "organic" architecture.

 

The 2,629-square-foot home conveys all the features that would become Rush Creek trademarks: a low profile that seems to hug the earth, exposed concrete block (outside and in), red tile floors, extensive roof overhangs, loads of built-in furniture, many floor-to-ceiling windows, unconventional room shapes, wood ceilings, a carport instead of a garage, and an angled setting well off the street.

 

Martha Wakefield lived in the home until her death, at age 85, in 2007, nine years after her husband died.  The home passed through a few owners before the current buyers picked it up in March 2014 for $415,000, when it was in need of attention.  After extensive renovations, the home is now listed for $975,000.

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