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Dailey Links University of California, Berkeley Buildings: Tollman Hall, Evans Hall, Morrison Hall, Hertz Hall, and Krober Hall

Gardner Dailey Photo
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/dailey.htm

World War II Manila American Cemetery and Memorial by Gardner Dailey B - Manila, Philippines
http://www.abmc.gov/ml.htm  

Red Cross Building, Merchant Marine Barracks and Residences
"Forgotten Modern Masters: The Vanishing Legacy of Bay Area Modernity"
California Preservation Foundation - 2004 Conference Presentation (PDF)


Gardner Dailey Telegraph Hill Residence (Staircase)- San Francisco, CA
http://www.louis-silcox.com/60modernistmasterpiece/

Classic Revival by Gardner Dailey - San Francisco, CA
http://www.sfproperties.com/properties/2440pacific/

 

Second Bay Region Style Links

Theodore C. Bernardi (1903-1990 - Profile) - became a partner with William Wurster and Donn Emmons to form the firm Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons (WBE) which produced hundreds of projects in the Second Bay Region Tradition. He was a lecturer in the Department of Architecture, UC Berkeley from 1954-1971.
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/bernardi.htm

Thomas D. Church (1902-1978 - Profile) - Landscape Architect who worked extensively with the Second Bay Region Style architects to create the indoor/outdoor feel and is credited with being the creator of the "modern California garden"
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/church.htm

Joseph Esherick (1914-1998, Profile).   A leading architect of the Second Bay Region Style.   He worked part-time for structural engineer Walter Steilberg before securing a full-time position in the office of Gardner Dailey.   He opened his San Francisco architectural firm in 1946 and he founded the firm Esherick, Homsey, Dodge and Davis (EHDD).   He taught at University of California, Berkeley from 1952-1985 and served as the chair the Architecture Department from 1976-1982. http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/esherick.htm            

Lockwood deForest III (1896-1949) A landscape architect who worked with architects of the Second Bay Region Style. The younger Thomas Church worked for deForrest early in his career.
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/deforest.htm

John Funk (1908-1993 - Profile) worked in the office of architect William Wurster. In the 1930s and 1940s, Funk helped make famous the second "Bay Region Style" of architecture which combined the openness and clarity of the International Style with the regional traditions of local materials and a sensitivity to the landscape.
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/funk.htm

Francis Joseph McCarthy (1910-1965 Profile) worked for William Wurster and was a prominent architect of the Second Bay Region Style
http://www.ced.berkeley.edu/cedarchives/profiles/mccarthy.htm

 

Lawrence Halprin Links

Lawrence Halprin (1916- ) One of the most celebrated and influential landscape architects of all time. He has been based in th San Francisco Bay area since the Second World War. He worked for Thomas Church before opening his own firm in 1949.   The Architectural Archives of the University of Pennsylvania contains a profile of Halprin, a description of the collection and a listing of selected Halprin projects.  
http://www.design.upenn.edu/archives/majorcollections/halprin.html

The Lizardi Collections website contains a brief biography as well as Halprin Lithographs that it sells   http://lizardicollections.com/store/halprin.html


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