Architecture (discipline)
Found in 31 Collections and/or Records:
National Visitor Center (Washington, D.C.) Collection
The National Visitor Center (Washington, D.C.) Collection includes materials concerning the projected construction of the National Visitor Center at Union Station in Washington D.C. in the 1970s. The collection includes correspondence, records, images, memorabilia, maps, and architecture drawings of the center, which was only open briefly from 1976 to 1978.
Perspective Drawing, "Perspectiva desde nivel 800 hacia centro comercial", Martha Bil Manevich, Buenos Aires, Argentina, n.d. (Ms2013-059)
Pidgeon Audio Visual Media Collection, 1979-2002
Collection consists of four multimedia lectures on architecture, design, and landscape architecture, given by women practitioners or husband/wife design teams.
Project Records (1963-2000)
The Joan Wood Project Record Series consists of six boxes and six oversized folders. Boxes 18-21 contain primarily paper records; boxes 22-23 contain photographic materials and portfolio sheets; and the oversized folders contain architectural and design drawings for clients and school work.
Han Schroeder Architectural Collection
The Han Schroeder Architectural Collection consists of correspondence, clippings, publications, teaching materials, scrapbooks, photographs, family information, and architectural materials by Schroeder (1918-1992).
Anna Alexandrovna Shchetinina Architectural Collection
Susana Torre Architectural Collection, 1830-2003 (Ms1990-016)
Kimiko Suzuki Architectural Collection,
The collection contains 3 sets of drawings and a publication for the Susume Abe residence completed in 1967. Abe was a famous education critic in Japan.
The Town of Tomorrow and Home Building Center Souvenir Folder,
The collection consists of plans and information about 15 demonstration houses in a model village at the 1939 World's Fair in New York.
Susana Torre Architectural Collection
After earning her degree in architecture in Buenos Aires, Argentinean Susana Torre arrived in New York in 1968 to study and practice architecture. Women's place in architecture and renovation of buildings are topics of particular interest to her. The Susana Torre collection consists of professional correspondence, project files, architectural drawings and sketches of some of her works, research notes, published articles about and by Torre, and teaching notes.
