Alfred Caldwell

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Alfred Caldwell
Personal Information
Name Alfred Caldwell
Nationality American
Birth date May 26, 1903
Birth place St. Louis, Missouri
Date of death 1998
Place of death Bristol, Wisconsin
Working Life
Significant Buildings
Significant Projects Lily Pool, Chicago, Illinois

Eagle Point Park, Dubuque, Iowa

Alfred Caldwell (1903-1998) was an American architect best known for his landscape architecture in and around Chicago, Illinois.

Contents

[edit] Career

Succeeded in his IIT teaching role by former student Paul Thomas.

[edit] Major works

  • Eagle Point Park, Dubuque, Iowa.
  • Promotory Point, Burnham Park, Chicago, Illinois.
  • Riis Park, Chicago.
  • Lily Pool at Lincoln park , Chicago. Recently restored, designated as a Chicago Landmark. Also known as the Alfred Caldwell Lilly Pool, or as the rookery.
  • Campus Landscaping, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. Major portions destroyed.

Caldwell, like his mentor Jens Jenson, promoted a natural style of landscape design. The intent was to manufacture a native landscape that copied natural ecosystems. A complete natural ecosystem requires little maintenance other than removal of non-native invasive species. Due to the subtleness of his planting designs and the live nature of landscape materials, many of Caldwell’s projects have fallen into disrepair as the result of improper maintenance and modifications.

Caldwell’s buildings are frequently mistaken for the work of Frank Lloyd Wright. Both architects created Prairie School designs in and around Chicago at roughly the same period of time. Caldwell stressed the importance of orientation for passive solar design, as well as integration into the landscape.

[edit] Caldwell’s own House

In the 1940's Caldwell began construction of own house near Bristol Wisconsin, along with planting nearly 30 acres of eastern hardwood forest. It was intended to be a working hobby farm. An apple orchard was planted, but farm buildings were never completed. As work progressed the house featured a low cost construction technique: stone for the stone walls was donated by neighboring farmers, labor was provided by teaching students how to build a stone wall.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Dennis Domer: Alfred Caldwell: The Life and Work OF A Prairie School Landscape Architect. The John Hopkins University press, Virginia, 1997, ISBN 0-8018-5551-9
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