Saddled with $2 M. in Debt, Price Tower, the Only Frank Lloyd Wright-designed Skyscraper, Is Up For Sale Again

Price Tower, the Frank Lloyd Wright-designed skyscraper in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, is set to close amid scandal, legal battles, and financial mismanagement a short 18 months after being purchased by Copper Tree Group, according to Artnet News. It’s the only example of a skyscraper designed by the famous architect.

The Copper Tree Group, led by Anthem and Cynthia Blanchard, initially promised a $10 million investment in the building, as part of its “commitment to responsible stewardship.” Cynthia Blanchard told the Bartlesville Examiner-Enterprise last year that Price Tower was the linchpin to a revitalization project she hoped would bring the tech sector and its deep pockets to the Ozarks. She called it “Silicon Ranch.” But the modernization, which included a planned boutique hotel and high-end restaurants failed to deliver.

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The Wayfarers Chapel in a landslide prone area following its closure due to land movement after heavy rains in Rancho Palos Verdes, California on February 16, 2024. The church, designed by Lloyd Wright, son of Frank Lloyd Wright, features glass walls and a connection to coastal nature of the Pacific Ocean. The National Historic Landmark overlooks Abalone Cove, a landslide complex on the Palos Verdes Peninsula, has had at least seven panes of glass break in the last year according to Rev. Dan Burchett, as well as sidewalks and roadways shifting from land movement as work continues to protect the structure from water, debris flows, and improve drainage. (Photo by Patrick T. Fallon / AFP) (Photo by PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP via Getty Images)

In an interview earlier this week with a Tulsa based news and talk radio station, 102.3 KRMG, Cynthia Blanchard said the building was officially for sale. She added they’d bought the building months earlier than they should have. “We didn’t know what we were getting in to,” she said. 

The current tenants, a hotel, rooftop bar, restaurant, arts organizations, and a local magazine, have been ordered to vacate by the end of August.

Legal troubles grew after the Blanchards revealed that HeraSoft, their blockchain company, was financially insolvent and was unable to pay its employees. Three of those employees claimed they were pressured into accepting equity in Price Tower instead of the money they were owed.

The Blanchards bought Price Tower for a token sum of $10. The building came with $600,000 worth of debt, a figure which, in the last 18 months, has ballooned to $2 million. 

Additionally, the sale of heritage furnishings from Price Tower, specifically designed by Wright for the building and prohibited under preservation agreements, has further complicated the situation. The Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy is now exploring legal options to protect the landmark, which faces significant preservation risks as it becomes vacant.

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