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Pages in category "Architects from Kansas City, Missouri" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. H.
He was a founding member of the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) in 1972, and has held faculty positions at the Southern California Institute of Architecture, California Polytechnic State University, Pomona, and the University of California, Los Angeles. Mayne was the recipient of the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2005. [3]
Kansas City, Missouri's first highrise is the New York Life Insurance Building, completed in 1890. It has twelve floors at a height of 180 feet (55 m) and is the first local building with elevators. After the New York Life Building was completed, Kansas City followed the national trend of constructing a plethora of buildings above ten stories.
Frederick C. Gunn was an American architect. [1] In the firm of Gunn & Curtiss with Louis Singleton Curtiss he helped design several county courthouses.. Gunn was born in Atchison, Kansas, in 1865 and grew up there until his family moved to Kansas City, Missouri when he was 14.
Country Club Plaza in Kansas City Philbrook. Edward Buehler Delk (1885–1956) was a prominent architect who designed many landmark buildings in the Midwest and Southwest regions of the United States. Delk was born on September 22, 1885, in Schoharie, New York. He graduated from University of Pennsylvania in 1907.
The Standard Theatre, now known as the Folly Theater and also known as the Century Theater and Shubert's Missouri, is a former vaudeville hall in downtown Kansas City, Missouri. Built in 1900, it was designed by Kansas City architect Louis S. Curtiss. The theater was associated with the adjoining Edward Hotel (known later as the Hotel Missouri ...
One Kansas City Place, completed in 1988. The Westwood City Hall in Westwood, Kansas, completed in 1991. R. Bruce Patty FAIA (January 25, 1935 – December 16, 1998) was an American architect in practice in Kansas City, Missouri from 1963 until his death in 1998.
Louis Singleton Curtiss (July 1, 1865 – June 24, 1924) was a Canadian-born American architect.Notable as a pioneer of the curtain wall design, he was once described as "the Frank Lloyd Wright of Kansas City". [1]