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That doghouse, however, later ended up in the dump because Berger said his mother did not have a dog, and did not see much other value in it. He rebuilt it for the documentary last year, working off Wright's original plan, which said, "Plan of Eddie's house."
"When I wrote him originally to design the doghouse, I specified that it be real easy to build," said Berger, who became a cabinetmaker. "It was a nightmare."
The doghouse, roughly 3 feet wide by 5 feet long by 3 feet high (0.9 meter wide by 1.5 meters long by 0.9 meter high), has a sharp triangular shape, with a sloping shingled roof. It is made of Philippine mahogany and weighs about 250 pounds (113 kilograms).
"It's definitely in the master's hand," Oskar Munoz, assistant director of archives at the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, said of the design for the doghouse.
Munoz said Berger's is believed to be the only doghouse Wright designed. Wright likely sketched it out and then handed it to a draftsman in his studio who turned it into a working drawing, he said.
Wright was past 80 and likely busy with dozens of projects at the time, Munoz said, so for him to take the time to make the sketch was unusual. Wright died in Phoenix in 1959.
Berger, who now lives in the Sacramento area and has three rescue beagles, said he's not sure what he will do with the doghouse.
Although his beagles are worthy of it, he said they would probably prefer to stay in the house.
"My feeling is that I'd like it to go to a museum because it is a historical monument," he said.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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