Frank Furness was a prominent Philadelphia architect in the late 1800s. He is buried in Laurel Hill Cemetery (which I have also posted about).
On the market: Wallingford home with Frank Furness library for $599,000 https://t.co/5Ndt0DuzR3
— The Philadelphia Inquirer (@PhillyInquirer) May 14, 2019
Robert Lewis House is a stand out even in a row of stunners.Arch: Frank Furness 1886
— šš¢šššØš«š¢šš§ ššØš®š¬šš¬ (@HousesVictorian) June 23, 2020
š·https://t.co/d0T5RiJGyT pic.twitter.com/mEf3B2YOA1
Long-hidden Frank Furness building will be renovated in West Philly https://t.co/Chk7KUrrq7
— The Philadelphia Inquirer (@PhillyInquirer) March 20, 2018
Frank Furness hotel rehab in Wilmington š https://t.co/eIvxW02QBX pic.twitter.com/2VCrwpchOP
— Ben She | š@bensh3@jawns.club (@bensh__) May 19, 2021
The Franklin Building was designed by Frank Furness in 1895. It's been a parking lot since 1940.
— Daniel Trubman (@dmtrubman) May 17, 2021
125 S 12th St
Philadelphia
How It Started vs How It's Going pic.twitter.com/RAt7NN5Ao8
long thread on frank furness, who I believe is on the very short list of "notable architects who weren't complete bastard-mans" https://t.co/bPVz6nMBe1
— Well There's Your Problem Podcast (@wtyppod) May 23, 2020
The fabulous facade of Frank Furness's lost Exchange House in Philadelphia, from Robert Venturi's 'Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture' (1966) https://t.co/c7YNoS4fKQ pic.twitter.com/KzliRbcSEp
— @about-buildings.bsky.social (@about_buildings) January 13, 2019
From Philadelphia Architects and Buildings
The Beginning And End Of Frank Furness
