Miller, Martin & Lewis Architects: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
* [[Farley Building]], [[1909]] | * [[Farley Building]], [[1909]] | ||
* [[Fairfield]] house prototypes, [[1910]] | * [[Fairfield]] house prototypes, [[1910]] | ||
* [[Louis Saks | * [[1916 Louis Saks building]], 1916, remodeled for [[Newberry's]] in 1961 | ||
* [[William Given residence]], [[1919]] | * [[William Given residence]], [[1919]] | ||
* [[Avondale Elementary School|Avondale School]], [[1922]] | * [[Avondale Elementary School|Avondale School]], [[1922]] | ||
Line 49: | Line 49: | ||
* [[Bromberg's building]], [[1946]] | * [[Bromberg's building]], [[1946]] | ||
* Additions to [[Bryant-Denny Stadium]], [[1950]] | * Additions to [[Bryant-Denny Stadium]], [[1950]] | ||
* [[Coleman Coliseum|Memorial Coliseum]], University of Alabama, [[1968]] | * [[Coleman Coliseum|Memorial Coliseum]], University of Alabama, [[1968]] | ||
Revision as of 16:50, 9 January 2018
Miller, Martin & Lewis Architects was a partnership of architects John Miller and Hugh Martin along with engineer James A. Lewis. Miller and Martin had met in New York City and traveled together to open the firm of Miller and Martin in the booming city of Birmingham around 1900. Lewis joined the firm in 1914.
Miller, Martin & Lewis was responsible for numerous important buildings in Birmingham as well as dozens of buildings on the campus of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. In Birmingham one of their important patrons was the Robert Munger family, who commissioned several commercial buildings at Five Points South and made large donations to Birmingham-Southern College which resulted in additional work for the firm.
Miller retired in 1930. Martin retired in 1952, and Lewis died in 1958, ending the firm's long reign.
Notable projects
- Goodall-Brown building, 1905
- Lakeview Clubhouse, 1908
- Farley Building, 1909
- Fairfield house prototypes, 1910
- 1916 Louis Saks building, 1916, remodeled for Newberry's in 1961
- William Given residence, 1919
- Avondale School, 1922
- Birmingham Trust building, 1922
- Munger Bowl stadium at Birmingham-Southern College, 1925
- President's House at Birmingham-Southern College, 1925
- Spanish Stores, 1926
- Birmingham Public Library, 1927
- East Lake Library, 1928
- Fred Jones Building, Five Points South, 1928
- Munger Hall at Birmingham-Southern College, 1928
- Andrews Hall at Birmingham-Southern College
- Munger Building at Five Points South, 1928
- Temple of Sibyl at the Vestavia estate, 1929
- Ware Building, Five Points South, 1930
- Amelia Gorgas Library, University of Alabama
- University of Alabama Administration Buildings
- Farrah Hall, University of Alabama
- Nott Hall, University of Alabama
- Engineering Buildings 1 & 2, University of Alabama
- Denny Chimes, University of Alabama
- Doster Hall, University of Alabama
- Colonial Dormitory, University of Alabama
- East & West Annex Dormitories, University of Alabama
- Julia Tutwiler Dining Halls, University of Alabama
- Stockham Woman's Building at Birmingham-Southern College, 1931
- Student Activity Building at BIrmingham-Southern College
- M. Paul Phillips Library at Birmingham-Southern College, 1932
- Loveman's building, 1935
- redevelopment of Roden Block, 1937
- Five Points Bowling Center, 1939
- Foster Auditorium, University of Alabama, 1939
- 12 more dormitories at the University of Alabama, 1939–1951
- Central City Housing Project, 1940
- Bromberg's building, 1946
- Additions to Bryant-Denny Stadium, 1950
- Memorial Coliseum, University of Alabama, 1968