
A house where everything outside and inside is designed by the incomparable architect Frank Lloyd Wright and still in its original condition has gone on the market for almost $1.4million.

The price may be a little steep for a three-bedroom, two-bathroom in St. Louis Park, a suburb of Minneapolis, where a nearby three-bedroom with 1,000 more square footage runs for less than half that, but not every home has been designed and furnished by the master.

The trademark sloping lines that seem to disappear into the surrounding land can be seen in the Frank Lloyd Wright house built in 1960 and for sale for $1.4million

The house is a Usonia which includes 'organic architecture' that should blend in with the surrounding nature

The dramatic straight, clean slope of the roof on one side is classic Frank Lloyd Wright

At night the sharp angles of the house make for a breathtaking sight as if you are headed into a theater not a house

The home is 2,647 square feet with three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a storage shed and a rarity for a Wright home, a basement, which the owners insisted on

Enormous windows are a Wright fixture and here they do justice to the eye-popping outdoors

One side of the dramatic home resembles the bow of a ship with its pointed ends and angled roof

The house, at 2206 Parklands Lane and handled by the Berg Larsen Group, is a classic Frank Lloyd Wright Usonia home, developed by Wright for a post-Depression era America. The home's concept includes lots of nature and 'organic architecture' that should seem to blend in with the surroundings.

A Usonia home should appear to 'have come up from the ground and into the fresh air and sunshine,' says a website dedicated to a Usonia home in Alabama.

The Parklands house is set on almost four acres and inside all of the furnishings and finishings were designed by Wright in conjunction with the original owners, Paul and Helen Olfelt, now in their 90s, who hired him in 1958, according to Smithsonianmag.com.

Wright believed that homes required lots of sunshine and should look like they spontaneously came up from the soil, as this one does

Almost four acres of lush rolling extremely private property and views on to a wildlife preserve make this home special not only for the Wright fan but the country fan

Nature is vivid and bucolic and on perfect display in the back of the Wright home in a Minneapolis suburb

The lawn slopes downward away from the house, which overlooks the breathtaking acreage on Parklands with deer, wild turkey and song birds roaming the property

The long cobbled drive sweeps you up to a secluded house with trees everywhere - some of which fell on the roof at one point, requiring a new one, according to the owners' disclosure forms

A dramatic jutting triangle portion of the roof slides all the way down to the ground, giving it the appearance of being one with the surrounding nature

The outdoor lights at the entryway are triangle, fitting in with the clean modern lines of the rest of the architecture

The house stunningly comes with Wright custom designed desks, tables, chairs, lamps and shelves

The home's interior mixes a light brown Mahogany millwork and paneled walls with Wright's favorite flooring

The uniquely cut chair backs and set cushions match the rest of the furniture and the home's architectural lines

The Cherokee red flooring theatrically offsets the bright green meadow beyond the wall to wall Transom Accent windows

The Wright straight backed couch travels the full length of the main room wall, above is a Solar Tube with lights

The long kitchen has Hexagon-shaped tables and chairs and marble counter tops with plenty of built in storage cabinetry

The kitchen bar comes with unique Hexagon bar stool chairs, a wall oven, and a sun dial clock, and even the landline will bring you back to the late '50s

The home has lots of long, narrow hallways with custom cabinetry all along the length of the walls, giving plenty of storage space, as well as privacy from main room to the next

Frank Lloyd Wright, arguably America's most well known architect, designed the house that's hit the market in a suburb of Minnesota - and all of its furniture

Wright died the next year before the house was finished, but the owners had consulted with him on every aspect of the house.

It's dramatically angled roof, open layout, vaulted ceilings, brick walls, huge windows seeming to invite the trees into the house, and Cherokee red concrete floor are all classic Wright.

It also has a rare Wright basement, which the owners insisted upon because they had four children who needed a lot of room, says the Smithsonian.

The bedrooms like the rest of the house are floored in Cherokee red and large windows overlooking the lush meadow and trees

The bedrooms are on the main level in the 'bedroom wing' and level with the trees peeking into the rooms

The house comes with Wright designed furniture including this custom built desk and lamp

The wooden slated Hexagon chair is classic Wright with its modern clean snappy lines

The owners reportedly demanded a basement so their four children would have a place to play and so they could have more storage space, thus the house has a rare Wright basement

Plenty of cabinetry and closets line the house, and the walls are varying shades of brown and beige brick