Saving Wright chronicles the ongoing struggle to save Wright's Freeman House in the Hollywood Hills, the setting for fascinating people and events but deeply flawed from the time it
was built ninety-five years ago. Jeffrey M. Chusid, who lived in the house and studied it while Harriet Freeman was still alive and residing there and, later, after she gave it to the School of
Architecture at the University of Southern California, examines the experimental "textile-block" construction system, the power of Wright's architecture, the interaction of people and place,
and the concepts and challenges of historic preservation-why and how we do it.