Inside The $12 Million Sydney Estate By Frank Lloyd Wright’s Protégé 65%
By Natalie Hoberman0%
7/18/2026, 12:45:00 AM
BS Summary: This article contains 27 faulty reasoning types, including Hasty Generalization, Attempt to Sell a Product or Service, and Post Hoc (False Cause), with Halo Effect as the most egregious example at 19.7% saturation with 110 hits. Analysis detected 847 faulty-reasoning hits from 559 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 59.8% and a BS Rank of 65% (6,059 of 17,195 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 64.80% of the article peer group.
Architects want to leave their mark on the world.
Walter Burley Griffin achieved something stranger.
He won a competition to design a new capital city for Australia—a city that never got built.
Then Frank Lloyd Wright accused him of being a copyist.
Griffin and Mahony first heard about the Canberra competition just after their wedding.
Whatever honeymoon reverie they’d planned soon gave way to tracing paper and late nights.
What made their proposal unique was that, rather than forcing a city onto the landscape, it let the landscape dictate the plan.
The win transformed Griffin into a celebrity overnight.
It also earned him an enemy.
Frank Lloyd Wright never forgave his former protégé's success.
For the next 45 years, he publicly dismissed Griffin as little more than a draftsman, a copyist who’d stolen his ideas.
(Reports of Wright’s professional feuds and embitterments are legion.)
Griffin’s presiding Australian statement would not be a parliament building or national monument, but a family home.
Completed in 1935, two years before his death, the Coppins estate was the last and largest home Griffin designed.
Like many confident houses, Coppins speaks its own language discreetly.
From the street, only glimpses of hand-cut sandstone and a low jade-green roof emerge behind mature gardens.
Deep overhanging eaves cast long shadows across geometric leadlight windows, while thick bands of locally quarried sandstone wrap the base – Griffin’s signature, written not in ink but in stone.
“It’s a property of prominence and proportions,” says Philip Waller, the agent who shares the US$11.8 million listing with broker Ken Jacobs of Private Property Global.
Griffin believed architecture should begin with the landscape rather than compete against it.
The gardens, conceived by Marion Mahony Griffin, remain every bit the equal of the architecture they frame.
Stone pathways meander across 1.4 acres beneath mature trees, before arriving at a 62-foot lap pool framed by clipped topiary and native plantings.
Rainbow lorikeets and kookaburras flying overhead seem to approve.
Beyond the pool, a two-bed guest house echoes the architecture of the main residence in miniature.
The house follows the same perfectly manicured logic.
Triple entry doors open into rooms that feel generous and far from overbearing.
Marble fireplaces and bespoke timber joinery soften a palette of black, white and brushed brass, while parquet floors bring warmth beneath the clean geometry.
A sculptural spiral staircase rises to the primary suite, complete with a sitting room and balcony overlooking the Sydney skyline.
It might not have been so.
In the early 2000s, a previous owner made unauthorized alterations to several heritage-listed elements, undoing decades of original fabric.
When former Bank of Queensland chief executive Stuart Grimshaw and his wife bought the estate in 2020, they spent the next two years returning it to Griffin’s original vision, matching timber and window profiles before introducing the comforts of contemporary living.
Authenticity has a home.
Griffin never lived to see Coppins become part of Sydney’s architectural canon.
Perhaps that's fitting.
Time has a habit of judging architects more generously than their contemporaries often do.
Coppins is listed for AUD $17 million (USD $11.8 million) with Ken Jacobs and Philip Waller of Forbes Global Properties member Private Property Global.
Forbes Global Properties is the invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real estate partner of Forbes.
Analysis
Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.