Paul Byard (August 30, 1939–July 15, 2008) was a lawyer and an architect. He was born in New York into an educationally successful family. His father was a lawyer and his mother was a teacher of English at Columbia University. Byard graduated from Yale College in 1961 and went on to receive degrees from Clare College, Cambridge, Harvard Law School, and later in architecture from Columbia.
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Upon completing law school, Byard joined the Winthrop & Stimson legal firm in 1966 for three years. He also acted as general counsel to the Roosevelt Island Development Corporation and as an associate counsel to the New York State Urban Development Corporation. Combining law with architecture, Byard supported the legal defense of the New York City Landmarks Preservation Law.
In 1977 Byard received an architectural degree from the Graduate School of Architecture and Planning at Columbia University. As an architect, he joined James Stewart Polshek & Associates in 1977. Soon after, in 1981, he was made a partner in the firm. In 1989, Byard joined Charles A. Platt Partners (later known as Platt Byard Dovell White).
While working as an architect, Byard was involved in the renovations of Carnegie Hall, the old Custom House on Bowling Green, the State Supreme Court’s Appellate Division Courthouse on Madison Square, the Cooper Union Foundation Building, and the Villard Houses. He also helped to design the New 42nd Street Studios, the Chanel 57 building, and a mausoleum and columbarium at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, all of which were of contemporary design.[1] Byard was highly involved in the Architectural League of New York and served as president from 1989-1994. [2]
While working as an architect, Byard wrote The Architecture of Additions: Design and Regulation (W.W. Norton, 1998), in which he discusses the renovations of many historic buildings and exhibits his knowledge of blending old and new styles of architecture.[3] At the time of his death, Byard was working on a book to be entitled Why Save This Building? The Public Interest in Architectural Meaning.
In keeping with his architectural interests, Byard directed the historic preservation program at Columbia for ten years until his death. He also developed a third-year studio and workshop for architecture and preservation students.[1]
Byard married Rosalie Starr Warren in 1965 and had two children. He lived in Prospect Heights, Brooklyn, where he died on July 15, 2008, of cancer.[1]
Architectural League of New York