Evans, Moore & Woodbridge
Evans, Moore, and Woodbridge was an American architectural firm in early to mid-twentieth-century New York City.[1] Through partner, Frederick James Woodbridge, FAIA, it was a predecessor firms Adams and Woodbridge, which estimated in 1953 that the firm and its predecessors (including Evans, Moore & Woodbridge, Adams & Prentice (1929–1941), and Mamfeldt, Adams & Woodbridge) had been responsible for "about 100 residences and alterations." [2]
Works as Evans, Moore & Woodbridge
- 1928: Roger Ascham School, White Plains, New York[1][2]
- 1929: Committee Health Center, Middletown, New Jersey, $25,000[2]
- 1929: Keene Valley Church, Keene Valley, New York[1] $25,000[2]
- 1932: Smith College Alumnae House, Northampton, Massachusetts, $285,000[1] or $300,000[2]
- Princeton University Faculty Housing, Princeton, New Jersey[1]
- R.T. Swaine Residence, Lewisboro, New York (as Evans, Moore & Woodbridge) [1]
- Morrow Library, Amherst, Massachusetts[1]
- H. Matthew Residence, Brewster, New York[1]
Works as Mamfeldt, Adams & Woodbridge
- 1932: Wethersfield Church Home, Wethersfield, Connecticut, $100,000[2]
gollark: Actually, "will go terribly" overstates it. It won't go.
gollark: Advance prediction: This will go terribly.
gollark: Libraries and stuff, perhaps.
gollark: CC has kind of ended up accidentally following the Unix thing of small simple tools, except often there are at least five copies of simple tools for no reason.
gollark: Yes, I suppose.
References
- "Questionnaire for Architects’ Roster and/or Register of Architects Qualified for Federal Public Works April 30, 1946.
- "Questionnaire for Architects’ Roster and/or Register of Architects Qualified for Federal Public Works "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-13. Retrieved 2011-04-26.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) February 27, 1953.
External links
- Evans, Moore & Woodbridge archival card catalog. Held by the Department of Drawings & Archives, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University.
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