Schultze and Weaver

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The architectural firm of Schultze and Weaver was established in New York City in 1921. The partners were Leonard Schultze and S. Fullerton Weaver. Schultze had been an employee of the firm of Warren & Wetmore, and during his twenty years in that company's office he had worked on the designs for such projects as New York's Grand Central Terminal.

Weaver's primary responsibilities in the new firm were in engineering, business, and real estate. Schultze and Weaver's first major commssion was from John McEntee Bowman's Biltmore Hotels, for the large Los Angeles hotel today known as the Millennium Biltmore.

Their later work included several other projects for the same company, including the Atlanta Biltmore Hotel and the Coral Gables Biltmore Hotel. In addition to their work outside New York, they designed several noted landmark hotels within the city, including The Pierre Hotel and its neighbor, the Sherry-Netherland. In 1929 they designed the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel which, upon its completion in 1931, was the world's largest, with 2,200 rooms.

Though best known for their work on luxury hotels, Schultze and WEaver also designed schools, hospitals, residential developments, and office buildings such as the 1925 New York headquarters of the J.C. Penney Company.

[edit] External links

"It's De Limit" Forbes article by Finn-Olaf Jones on Schulze and Weaver, April 24, 2006

Metroplis Magazine story on Schultze and Weaver

Wolfsonian exhibit on Schultze and Weaver

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