Kenneth MacKenzie Murchison (1872–1938) was a U.S. architect. He was born in New York City in 1872 and died in New York in 1938.
Murchison graduated from Columbia University in 1894 and from the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France, in 1900. Two years later, he opened an office in New York where his first major commissions were for railroad stations for the Pennsylvania Railroad company. Among the stations he designed are the Delaware Lackawanna Station, Hoboken, NJ; both the Lackawanna Terminal and the Lehigh Terminal, Buffalo, NY, and Pennsylvania Station, Baltimore, MD. [1]
He also designed:
In New York, he was well known as one of the founders of the Beaux Arts Balls, elaborate costume parties benefiting architects who had fallen on hard times. He also was a founder of the Mendelsohn Glee Club. He lived in the Beaux Arts Apartments, which he designed, at 310 E. 44th St.[2]
Murchison died suddenly, at 11:45 p.m. on Dec. 15, 1938, "as he was emerging from the I.R.T. station in Grand Central Terminal," the New York Times reported.[2]
At the time of his death, he had started work on a new Dunes Club to replace the one destroyed a few months earlier. He was survived by his widow, Aurelie de Mauriac Murchison and two daughters, Mrs. Hays Browning and Mrs. Edoard deWardener.
Name | Location | Date | Built for | Current use | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Station | Scranton, Pennsylvania | 1908 | Lackawanna Railroad | Hotel | |
Beaux Arts Apartments | 310 E. 44th St., New York | 1929-1930 | Apartments | ||
U.S. Marine Hospital | Staten Island, NY | ||||
Havana Central railway station | Havana, Cuba | 1912 | Congress of Cuba | Railroad station | |
Munson Steamship Lines Building[3] | 1 Wall Street Court, New York City | 1906 | Munson Steamship Company | Co-op (converted in 2003) | |
Train station | Johnstown, Pennsylvania | 1916 | |||
Pennsylvania Station[4] | Baltimore, Maryland | 1911 | Pennsylvania Railroad |