Paul Rudolph (architect)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Rudolph | |
Orange County Government Center in Goshen, New York, designed by Paul Rudolph in 1963, built in 1967 |
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Personal information | |
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Name | Paul Rudolph |
Nationality | United States |
Birth date | October 23, 1918 |
Birth place | Elkton, Kentucky |
Date of death | August 8, 1997 (aged 78) |
Place of death | New York |
Work | |
Significant buildings | Yale Art and Architecture Building |
- For other people named Paul Rudolph, see Paul Rudolph (disambiguation).
Paul Marvin Rudolph (October 23, 1918 in Elkton, Kentucky – August 8, 1997 in New York, New York) was an American architect and the dean of the Yale School of Architecture for six years, known for his cubist building designs and highly complex floor plans. His most famous work is the Yale Art and Architecture Building (A&A Building), a spatially complex Brutalist concrete structure.
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[edit] Education
Rudolph earned his bachelors's degree in architecture at Auburn University (then known as Alabama Polytechnic Institute) in 1940 and then moved on to the Harvard Graduate School of Design to study with Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius. After three years, he left to serve in the Navy for another three years, returning to Harvard to receive his master's in 1947.
[edit] Work
He moved to Sarasota, Florida and partnered with Ralph Twitchell for four years until he started his own practice in 1951. Rudolph's Sarasota time is now part of the period labeled Sarasota Modern in his career.
Notable for its appearance in the 1958 book, Masters of Modern Architecture, the W. R. Healy House, built in 1950, was a one-story Sarasota house built on posts. The roof was concave, in order to allow rainwater to drain off. In addition, Rudolph used jalousie windows, which enabled the characteristic breezes to and from Sarasota Bay to flow into the house. Adaptation to the subtropical climate was central to his designs and Rudolph is considered one of the major architects in what is labeled the Sarasota School of Architecture.
Other Sarasota landmarks by Rudolph include the Sarasota County Riverview High School, built in 1957 as his first large scale project. Currently, it is slated for demolition despite international criticism [1] and a great deal of controversy in Sarasota, where many members of the community are appealing for the retention of the historic building since the decision reached in 2006 by the county school board.
Paul Rudolph's Florida houses attracted attention in the architectural community and he started receiving commissions for larger works such as the Jewett Art Center at Wellesley College. He took over the helm of the Yale School of Architecture as its dean in 1958, shortly after designing the Yale Art and Architecture Building. That building often is considered his masterpiece. He stayed on at Yale for six years until he returned to private practice. He designed the Temple Street Parking Garage, also in New Haven, in 1962.
He later designed the Government Service Center in Boston, the main campus of University of Massachusetts Dartmouth (then known as the Southeastern Massachusetts University), the Dana Arts Center at Colgate University, and the Burroughs Wellcome headquarters in North Carolina.
While the Brutalist style fell out of favor in the U.S. during the 1970s, Rudolph's work evolved, and became in demand in other countries. Rudolph designed reflective glass office towers in this period, such as the D. R. Horton, and Wells Fargo towers in Fort Worth, which departed from his concrete works. Rudolph continued working on projects in Singapore, where he designed The Concourse office tower with its ribbon windows and interweaving floors, as well as projects in other Asian countries through the last years of his life. His work, the Lippo Centre, completed in 1987, is a landmark in the area near Admiralty Station of MTR in Hong Kong, and a culmination of Rudolph's ideas in reflective glass.
[edit] Death
Rudolph died at the age of seventy-eight in New York from mesothelioma, a cancer that almost always originates from exposure to asbestos.
[edit] External links
- The Paul Rudolph Foundation
- The Paul Rudolph and His Architecture Web Site
- Collection at the Art Institute of Chicago
- Paul Rudolph at greatbuildings.com
- Paul Rudolph at arbitat.com
- A Road Trip Back to The Future"; The New York Times: account by architecture critic of visits to Rudolph buildings within a day's drive of New York area.
- Paul Rudolph photo pool at Flickr
- Rethinking Preservation: A Case for Paul Rudolph's BCBS Building