UC Santa Barbara Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
UC Santa Barbara
- Location: Santa Barbara, CA
- Phone: (805) 893-2724
- Email: adc@museum.ucsb.edu
- Website: http://www.adc-exhibits.museum.ucsb.edu/
The Architecture and Design Collection is part of the Art, Design & Architecture Museum at UCSB. With over 250 collections and almost 2 million items, the ADC is one of the largest architectural archives in North America. The archive contains drawings, photographs, models, project papers, decorative objects, and furniture from Southern California architects and designers from the late 19th through the early 21st century, with a specific focus on Southern California Modernism.
Collections at this institution
A.E. Hanson (1893-1986): Landscape Designs
A. E. Hanson, landscape architect and land developer, was born in Chino, California on December 20, 1893. After two years of high school, Hanson left to assist his family monetarily, and began working for landscape architect Theodore Payne, and then in 1915 for landscape architect Paul Howard in Los Angeles. Despite his lack of formal training, Hanson started his own firm in 1916 and by the end of the 1920’s he was designing and constructing many of the largest private gardens in Southern California. During the 1930s he developed Rolling Hills in Rancho Palos Verdes, as well as Hidden Hills …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
8 Items
Albert Frey (1903-1998): Frey House 1 and 2
Albert Frey was a Swiss architect who moved to Palm Springs in the early 1930s and partnered with John Clark in 1935 to form the firm Clark and Frey. In 1952, Robson Chambers became a partner, and the firm was renamed Clark, Frey and Chambers. During his 63 years in Palm Springs, Frey’s most notable projects include: the Raymond Loewy house, the Guthrie house, the Clark & Frey Office building, the Aerial Tramway and Gas Station, Palm Springs City Hall, the Desert Hospital, the North Shore Yacht Club, Villa Hermosa, and Frey Houses I and II. Albert Frey's personal houses …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
10 Items
Albert Frey (1903-1998)
Albert Frey was born in Zurich, Switzerland on October 18, 1903. Frey received his formal architectural training at the Institute of Technology in Winterthur, Switzerland. During his education at the Institute of Technology, Frey apprenticed for two years under the architect A. J. Arter in Zurich. Graduating in 1924, Frey traveled around Europe and settled by 1925 in Brussels where he worked for Jean-Jules Eggericx and Raphael Verwilghen. Leaving Eggericx and Verwilghen in 1927, Frey moved to France where he worked as a draftsman for Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret. In 1930, Frey’s visa application was approved and he relocated …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
13 Items
Barton Myers (1934- )
Barton Myers was born in 1934 in Norfolk, Virginia. From 1952-1956 he attended the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis where he graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in Science. After serving as a pilot, stationed in the UK, Myers went back to school in architecture at the University of Pennsylvania and graduated in 1964. Afer school, Myers found work as a draftsman for his former teacher, Louis I. Kahn, in Philadelphia. Two years later, in 1968, Myers launched his architectural career in Toronto, Canada, in partnership with A. J. Diamond. A. J. Diamond and Barton Myers became known especially for projects …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
29 Items
Carleton Monroe Winslow, Sr. (1876-1946)
Carleton Monroe Winslow Sr. was born in Maine on December 12, 1876. He studied architecture at the Art Institute of Chicago and at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, studying in the Atelier Pascal and in the Atelier Stelier Chiffot Greres. Just out of school, Winslow secured a job with Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson in New York. He was promoted within the firm in 1911 as the supervising architect of the Panama-California Exposition in San Diego, a project on which he worked for four years. Once in San Diego, Winslow decided to stay and opened an office in 1915, when …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
7 Items
Case Study Houses
The Case Study House program was started by Art & Architecture Magazine in 1945 as a way for architects to begin to formulate ideas for post-World War II housing. There are a few Case Study House architects whose collections are housed at the ADC: J.R. Davidson, Whitney Smith (of Smith & Williams), and Edward Killingsworth (of Killingsworth, Brady, and Smith). Additionally, our Ester McCoy collection of papers also contains drawings and materials pertaining to the design of some of the Case Study Houses. The housing designs showed that good architecture and good design could be scaled up to produce low …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
10 Items
Cliff May (1908-1989): Custom Ranch Houses
Cliff May, known as 'the father of the ranch house,' was an early proponent of the California style ranch house. He first built hacienda style houses in San Diego in the 1930s, then moved to Los Angeles to create some of the most widely recognized ranch-style houses in the country. His early custom ranch houses of the 1930s follow the compact designs of his hacienda-style houses, but with central courtyards and face inwards. After the WWII years and the boom in tract housing through the 1950s, the custom houses Cliff May designed became larger, more open to the outside world, …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
32 Items
Curlett & Beelman: Eastern Columbia Building
The 13 story Art Deco building on the corner of Broadway and Ninth Street in downtown Los Angeles, was designed and built by Claud Beelman of the firm Curlett & Beelman. The building was built with steel reinforced concrete and is covered in turquoise terra cotta tile, with blue and gold accents, and the upper portion of the building has a clock on all four sides, along with the word EASTERN in white neon. The Curlett & Beelman firm was formed by Alexander (Aleck) Curlett (1881-1942) and Claud W. Beelman (1884-1963) in 1919. They are well known for their large …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
7 Items
Edla Muir (1906-1971)
Edla Muir, also known by her married name, Edla Muir Lambie, was born in San Francisco, California on January 23, 1906. At the age of 13, Muir worked summers and weekends in the architectural firm of John Byers. When she graduated from Inglewood High School in 1923, she worked as an office assistant for Byers until 1926, when she was promoted to draftswomen and designer. In 1934, after receiving her architectural license, Byers and Muir formed a partnership, renaming the firm John Byers and Edla Muir, Associated Architects. When the firm dissolved in 1942, Muir became the principle of her …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
7 Items
Edward A. Killingsworth (1917-2004): Hotels
Edward Abel Killingsworth was born in Taft, California in 1917. He attended the University of Southern California where he began his academic career studying painting but after a year, decided to switch his course of study to architecture. Killingsworth graduated cum laude with a Bachelor’s degree in Architecture in 1940. He served in WWII as a Captain in the Army Corps of Engineers where he supervised the production of more than 8 million photo-maps in preparation of the allied invasion of Europe. After being discharged from the military in 1946, Killingsworth got a job as a draftsman at the Kenneth …
Institution: UC Santa Barbara, Architecture and Design Collection, Art, Design and Architecture Museum
11 Items