William B. Tabler Sr. | |
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Born | 1914 Momence, Illinois |
Died | February 3, 2004 Upper Brookville, New York |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Work | |
Practice | William B Tabler Architects |
Buildings | Hilton New York, Hilton Washington |
Design | Efficient, modern hotels |
William B. Tabler Sr. (October 28, 1914 - February 3, 2004) was an American architect who designed more than 400 hotels. He was best known for giving Hilton hotels the clean but sometimes stark face of corporate America, most notably in the 46-story slablike New York Hilton near Rockefeller Center.[1]
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Mr. Tabler was born in Momence, Illinois, and received his bachelor's and master's degrees from Harvard. In 1939 he joined the Chicago firm Holabird & Root, where he worked on his first big hotel project, the 1,000-room Statler Hotel in Washington, D.C.[1]
After serving in the United States Navy during the World War II, he became head of Statler's in-house architecture department in 1946. He formed his own practice, William B Tabler Architects, in 1955.[1]
His son, William B. Tabler Jr., is also an architect and continues the architectural practice in Manhattan.
Tabler's designs affected generations of travelers after World War II when downtown hotels began to look more and more like the office buildings around them.
Mr. Tabler designed the 2,153-room Hilton New York at Rockefeller Center in 1963 with David P. Dann for a partnership called Rock-Hil-Uris for its principals: Laurance S. Rockefeller, Conrad Hilton and Percy and Harold Uris.