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Guggenheim Won't Go Yellow

Story by Margaret Foster / Dec. 11, 2007

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New York, N.Y.
The Guggenheim will retain its current look. (Finlay McWalter)

After much debate about a paint job for Manhattan's Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission decided last month that the Frank Lloyd Wright building will retain its current color, light gray.

The issue: repainting the famous spiral-shaped building the light yellow color Wright chose when it was completed in 1959. The original yellow had been covered with 11 layers of paint, unearthed in 2005 during a $29 million renovation of the Guggenheim.

The commission voted 7-2 for light gray on Nov. 21, and workers will begin repainting the facade this spring.

Now entering its third year, the Guggenheim renovation is scheduled to be completed this summer.

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