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431:, completed in 1924.) The First Chinese Church of Christ (1929) artfully blends bell tower with pagoda, stained glass with colorful glazed tiles, and crosses with traditional Chinese geometric patterns. Similar Chinese motifs can also be seen in the work of other architects that Wood influenced, such as in J. Alvin Shadinger's interior design for the
479:
Frederick Ohrt became a regular client after being appointed head of the new Board of Water Supply in 1930. He hired Wood to design pumping stations at
Pacific Heights (1933), Makiki (1935), and Kalihi Uka (1935); and an aerator in Nuʻuanu (1936). In fact, Wood's last major project was the Board of
422:
Among his most striking designs are two churches. The First Church of Christ
Scientist (1923), where he was a member, employs local materials, adapts some Hawaiian building techniques, and lies athwart cooling tradewinds in a shady tropical landscape. (He employed a similar design in 1922 for the
339:
in 1914 severely reduced both new architectural commissions and access to high-quality
European tools of the trade. Wood left Bliss and Faville to work briefly for another firm known for
959:
502:
383:, east of Berkeley. However, so little work was available during the war years that the two dissolved their partnership in 1917, and Wood worked in a shipyard to make ends meet.
682:
514:
438:
Wood designed one of the first stores in
Waikiki, the Gump Building (1929). Among the more notable of the many private residences he designed are those for Dr. James Morgan,
179:
158:. Hart's grandfather Samuel Wood, father Thomas Hart Benton Wood, and uncle Louis M. H. Wood were all in the building trades. His Uncle Louis had studied architecture at
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134:
appropriate to the local environment and reflective of the cultural heritage of the islands. He was one of the three founders (in 1926) of the
Honolulu Chapter of the
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443:
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320:. As their chief draftsman, Wood was heavily involved, especially in designing the exposition's landscaping and Great Wall. He also worked with
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308:. In 1911 he became a licensed architect, no longer just a draftsman, and the following year designed his own home on a steep hillside in
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238:
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367:) styles for suburban living, a style they employed to good effect in designing houses and landscaping lots in the newly expanding
312:, a modest but well-crafted, wood-shingled house with rustic features worthy of Maybeck, including porch columns of bark-sheathed
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296:. In 1910, he founded the Oakland Architectural Club and served as its first president (1910–1912). Other members included
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379:") and in a wooded residential subdivision for its workers commissioned by Pacific Electric Metals Company of
233:(1892). By 1902, he had moved to California, where he spent a year drafting plans for new campus building of
340:
316:. Also in 1912 Bliss and Faville was chosen as one of five San Francisco architectural firms to work on the
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292:, known for designing individualistic rustic homes. Wood married Jessie Spangler on November 21, 1906, in
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468:) (1933) and houses for the Waimea Plantation doctor and Kekaha Plantation skilled workers (1934). On
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Wood first arrived in Hawaiʻi in 1919, at the age of 38 and with a new partner he had met in
Oakland:
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in 1915. In between scarce commissions, the new partners published a series of articles in
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237:, where conservative Richardsonian Romanesque detail adorned newly evolving California
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416:
411:. The partnership lasted until 1928 and produced many notable buildings, such as the
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419:(1929)—the latter in collaboration with every other major architect in town.
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143:
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62:
58:
861:(Honolulu: Hawaii Society/American Institute of Architects, 1982), pp. 11–12
229:(1908). In 1900, he joined Frank E. Edbrooke & Company, who had designed the
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130:. He was one of the principal proponents of a distinctive "Hawaiian style" of
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96:
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of 1871, then settled in Kansas in 1873, working until 1887 with architect
198:. Thomas moved his family west in the early 1880s, settling for a time in
450:(1926), and Robert Pew (whose house was known as "Wei Lan Tien") (1931).
396:
213:
Hart began his architectural career in Denver, finding work in 1898 as a
81:
163:
472:
he designed the Ewa
Plantation administration building (1934), and on
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206:, awash with architects and civic art clubs and rapidly filling with
395:, who had secured two residential and two commercial commissions in
138:, and the only one of its fourteen charter members to be elected a
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built during 1923â1932. He died in
Honolulu on October 6, 1957.
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139:
118:
27:
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797:
Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 34–46, 53–54
508:
First
Chinese Church of Christ, with pagoda bell tower, 1923
265:, and other major buildings arising from the ashes of the
464:. On Kauaʻi he designed the Waimea Community Center (now
363:. One article extolled the virtues of "English cottage" (
284:
In 1904, he moved to the more rural East Bay area around
902:
Sandler, Rob, Julie Mehta, and Frank S. Haines (2008).
870:
Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 197, 203–210
483:
Many of the buildings he designed are on the State and
261:
just in time to work on their most famous project, the
328:, on a unique long, towering fence frame covered with
122:(December 26, 1880 â October 6, 1957) was an American
253:. He then spent a year working for the young firm of
891:
Hibbard, Don, Glenn Mason, and Karen Weitze (2010).
277:
of the Union
Savings Bank (1909), the Columbia (now
194:, and federal schools for tribes in the neighboring
652:
Exterior of Waimea Community Center buildings, 1933
640:
Interior of Waimea Community Center gymnasium, 1933
532:
First Chinese Church of Christ, side verandah, 1923
520:
First Chinese Church of Christ, front doorway, 1923
102:
92:
70:
44:
21:
879:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 211–218
688:Dole Plantation manager's house, LÄnaÊ»i City, 1936
281:) Theater (1909), and the Masonic Temple (1912).
904:Architecture in Hawaiâi: A Chronological Survey,
893:Hart Wood: Architectural Regionalism in Hawaiâi.
806:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 56–57
788:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 31–34
761:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 16–18
544:First Chinese Church of Christ, front face, 1923
202:. By 1890, both brothers had moved to a booming
960:Fellows of the American Institute of Architects
752:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 9–27
743:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, pp. 1–6
556:First Church of Christ Scientist, front, 1923
8:
676:Ewa Plantation administration building, 1934
476:the Dole Plantation manager's house (1936).
142:. He served as territorial architect during
707:"Territorial Architecture - The Golden Age"
332:along the main entrance of the exposition.
288:, home to distinctive architects including
399:. Dickey had an architecture degree from
245:. At Stanford, he was also exposed to the
126:who flourished during the "Golden Age" of
36:
18:
906:new edition. Honolulu: Mutual Publishing.
154:Hart Wood was born December 26, 1880, in
734:Sandler, Mehta, and Haines 2008, p. 163
698:
498:
318:PanamaâPacific International Exposition
273:of the Bank of California and the more
849:Sandler, Mehta, and Haines 2008, p. 72
815:Sandler, Mehta, and Haines 2008, p. 49
779:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, p. 29
770:Hibbard, Mason, and Weitze 2010, p. 28
604:Alexander & Baldwin Building, 1929
489:Honolulu TudorâFrench Norman Cottages
347:, before going into partnership with
7:
568:Albert Spencer Wilcox Building, 1924
485:National Register of Historic Places
353:Architect and Engineer of California
859:Oral histories of 1930's architects
241:under the guidance of Boston-based
460:helped keep him afloat during the
324:, the horticulturist who designed
239:Mission Revival Style architecture
14:
174:, whose commissions included the
955:People from Piedmont, California
950:Artists from Oakland, California
930:20th-century American architects
681:
669:
657:
645:
633:
621:
609:
597:
585:
573:
561:
549:
537:
525:
513:
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413:Alexander & Baldwin Building
136:American Institute of Architects
480:Water Supply Building (1958).
425:Albert Spencer Wilcox Building
359:of the kind envisioned by the
1:
243:Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge
940:Architects from Philadelphia
664:Makiki Pumping Station, 1934
580:Dr. Robert Faus House, 1925
257:before joining the firm of
227:Colorado Governor's Mansion
986:
970:Architects from California
897:University of Hawaii Press
592:Frederick Ohrt House, 1925
466:Boys & Girls Clubhouse
156:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
826:"Kauaʻi Museum: About Us"
487:, including three of the
453:Commissions from various
302:Louis Christian Mullgardt
271:Neoclassical architecture
225:, who later designed the
35:
945:People from Hays, Kansas
267:San Francisco earthquake
208:Richardsonian Romanesque
182:, and buildings for the
448:Georges de S. Canavarro
341:Beaux-Arts architecture
269:of 1906, including the
180:Chase County Courthouse
965:Architects from Kansas
628:Lloyd Case House, 1930
403:, and was grandson of
393:Charles William Dickey
373:Burlingame, California
247:landscape architecture
935:Hawaiian architecture
409:missionary to Hawaiʻi
381:Bay Point, California
251:Frederick Law Olmsted
128:Hawaiian architecture
107:Hawaiian architecture
405:William P. Alexander
361:Garden city movement
310:Piedmont, California
294:Berkeley, California
210:buildings downtown.
184:University of Kansas
176:Kansas State Capitol
616:Gump Building, 1929
357:planned communities
286:Oakland, California
235:Stanford University
188:Washburn University
86:Territory of Hawaii
231:Brown Palace Hotel
160:Cornell University
16:American architect
711:HawaiiHistory.org
423:main body of the
349:Horace G. Simpson
298:John Galen Howard
263:St. Francis Hotel
259:Bliss and Faville
255:Meyer and O'Brien
192:Haskell Institute
162:, sought work in
140:Fellow of the AIA
112:
111:
55:December 26, 1880
977:
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828:. Archived from
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713:. Archived from
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637:
625:
613:
601:
589:
577:
565:
553:
541:
529:
517:
505:
462:Great Depression
326:Golden Gate Park
275:Beaux-Arts style
223:Albert J. Norton
219:Willis A. Marean
217:for the firm of
204:Denver, Colorado
196:Indian Territory
121:
77:
54:
52:
40:
30:
19:
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533:
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521:
518:
509:
506:
497:
440:Dr. Robert Faus
433:R.N. Linn House
389:
345:Lewis P. Hobart
290:Bernard Maybeck
172:John G. Haskell
152:
117:
88:
79:
75:
74:October 6, 1957
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56:
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31:
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444:Frederick Ohrt
388:
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375:(billed as a "
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110:
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103:Known for
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94:
90:
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78:(aged 76)
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68:
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33:
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832:on 2010-08-02
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717:on 2016-05-07
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430:
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417:Honolulu Hale
414:
410:
406:
402:
398:
394:
387:Hawaiʻi Years
386:
384:
382:
378:
377:City of Trees
374:
370:
366:
365:Tudor Revival
362:
358:
354:
350:
346:
342:
338:
335:The onset of
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47:
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39:
34:
29:
20:
903:
892:
875:
866:
858:
854:
845:
834:. Retrieved
830:the original
820:
811:
802:
793:
784:
775:
766:
757:
748:
739:
730:
719:. Retrieved
715:the original
710:
701:
482:
478:
452:
437:
421:
390:
352:
334:
322:John McLaren
306:Oswald Spier
283:
212:
200:Hays, Kansas
153:
144:World War II
132:architecture
114:
113:
76:(1957-10-06)
63:Pennsylvania
59:Philadelphia
925:1957 deaths
920:1880 births
458:plantations
415:(1929) and
407:, an early
337:World War I
150:Early years
914:Categories
895:Honolulu:
886:References
836:2011-01-20
721:2009-05-09
343:, that of
168:Great Fire
166:after the
93:Occupation
51:1880-12-26
455:sugarcane
330:iceplants
215:draftsman
124:architect
115:Hart Wood
97:Architect
23:Hart Wood
446:(1925),
442:(1924),
435:(1928).
397:Honolulu
82:Honolulu
495:Gallery
314:redwood
164:Chicago
474:LÄnaÊ»i
369:suburb
304:, and
65:, U.S.
694:Notes
470:Oʻahu
429:Lihue
279:Geary
221:and
119:FAIA
71:Died
45:Born
28:FAIA
427:in
401:MIT
371:of
355:on
249:of
916::
709:.
300:,
190:,
186:,
178:,
146:.
84:,
61:,
899:.
839:.
724:.
53:)
49:(
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