Walker and Weeks

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Walker and Weeks was an architecture firm based in Cleveland, Ohio. The firm was founded by Frank Ray Walker (1877-1949) and Harry F. Weeks (1871-1935). Both men studied at MIT and moved to Cleveland to work for prominent Cleveland architect J. Milton Dyer. In 1911, Walker and Weeks opened their own practice and continued to produce work even after Weeks's death, until the early 1950s. As was often the case with architecture firms, Walker was the designer while Weeks was primarily the businessman.

The firm is most noted for its bank buildings, designing several dozen in the teens alone. Their most well known bank was the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland built in 1923. However, they also designed a wide variety of commercial, public, ecclesiastic and residential buildings, as well as a number of bridges, during the course of the firm's life.

Walker and Weeks frequently employed sculptor Henry Hering to create sculpture for their projects.

Like many architects the firm produced work in a variety of styles, from Neoclassical, Italian Renaissance and finally, the 1930s, ending in Moderne and/or Art Deco.

[edit] Notable buildings

[edit] References

  • Gaede, Robert C. & Kalin, Robert, editors, Guide to Cleveland Architecture, Cleveland Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, Cleveland, 1990.
  • Johannesen, Eric, A Cleveland Legacy: The Architecture of Walker and Weeks, Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio, 1999.
  • Johannesen, Eric, Cleveland Architecture: 1876-1976, Western Reserve Historical Society, 1981.
  • Rarick, Holly M., Progressive vision: The Planning of Downtown Cleveland 1903 - 1930, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, 1986.