Frederick Penn Weaver

ARA, Fall 2019

Frederick ‘Fred’ Weaver, FAIA (1912–1968) cofounded the distinguished Phoenix architectural firm, Weaver & Drover. The successor, DWL Architects + Planners Inc., celebrated its 70th anniversary in 2019. The firm designed significant Arizona buildings: Phoenix Sky Harbor International Terminals 2, 3 and 4 (1962– and with Lescher & Mahoney Architects, 1979 and 1990); the Chapel at the Arizona State Hospital (1963), also in Phoenix; Arizona State University’s Charles Trumbull Library and Pedestrian Mall (1966); and Valley National Bank branches, the most famous at 44th Street and Camelback Road (1968) in Phoenix. “Weaver & Drover . . . delivered well-designed commercial, institutional and governmental commissions throughout the Phoenix area . . . done with a confident, sophisticated and elegant touch,” says Doug Sydnor, FAIA.

View the whole story
(7 MB PDF document opens in new tab)

Phoenix 202 Completion

ENR, September 2019

The 22-mile South Mountain Freeway completes the Loop 101 and Loop 202 system circumnavigating the Phoenix area. Meeting the Arizona Department of Transportation’s January 1, 2020, deadline was just one of many achievements of this challenging project. While researching it for an Engineering News Record story, I was able to ride and walk part of the mileage with members of the joint venture of Fluor Enterprises Inc., Ames Construction Inc. and Granite Construction Co. This was during the scorching Phoenix summer, but that half day was vital. Another challenge for the contractors was blasting through four small granite hills. In one section sacred to the Native Americans, the land was blessed by a community leader, and no rubble from the blast could leave the area, inspiring the contractors to repurpose it for embankments and substrate.

View the whole story
(1 MB PDF document opens in new tab)

Reginald G. Sydnor

ARA, Fall 2018

Look anywhere in the Valley and you’ll read the late Reginald Gene Sydnor, AIA, signature: the 1957 Motorola Governmental Electronics Plant, Scottsdale; 1960 ASU Hiram Bradford Farmer Education Building, Tempe; 1969 St. Luke’s Hospital and Medical Center Major Expansion, Phoenix; and six homes from the 1960s and 1970s. The native of Bellpoint, West Virginia, pioneered post-World War II Phoenix architecture, with notables such as Edward L. Varney, a principal of Varney Sexton Sydnor Architects with whom Sydnor worked for much of his Phoenix career. During 42 years of practice, most in Arizona from 1955 to 1991, “Reg” (“Redge”) completed 250 projects in Arizona, Washington and California. Sydnor’s architectural legacy continues with one of his sons, Doug, who says, “He went through life with the utmost integrity, delivered every promise without exception and brought balanced judgment and fairness to every situation.”

View the whole story
(1.7 MB PDF document opens in new tab)

Ralph Haver: Neighborhoods to Haverhoods

ARA, April 2018

Ralph Haver (1915-1987), AIA, was both architect and builder, designing tract and custom homes, military and multifamily housing, neighborhoods, churches, schools, banks, municipal buildings and malls. He pioneered the new Phoenix following World War II, as GIs returned home and Easterners and Midwesterners found warm climate, A/C and new opportunities in the Southwest. Haver-designed homes in North Phoenix neighborhoods such as Canal North (1946), Marlen Grove (1953), Windemere (1955), and Scottsdale’s Town & Country III (1963) are gentrifying and bringing high resale values. “Ralph Haver was . . . able to deliver inspiring and modestly elegant residential designs on a massive scale, improving the quality of life for tens of thousands of families in the Southwest,” says Alison King, a Phoenix designer and historian who founded and maintains ModernPhoenix.net, a superlative source for Mid-Century Modern resources in Arizona.

View the whole story
(2.1 MB PDF document opens in new tab)

Celebrating Frank Lloyd Wright at 150

Green Living, June 2017

We mark the 150th anniversary of the birth of Frank Lloyd Wright this year (1867−1959) for many reasons. He affirmed a truly American architecture, celebrating the unique topographies of our landscape, from the early Prairie Style, exemplified by the Robie House (1907) in Chicago, Illinois, through the later work in the Southwest such as Taliesin West (1937) in Scottsdale. He was innovative, too, such as building Fallingwater (1935) in western Pennsylvania for the Edgar J. Kaufmann family on a waterfall or designing the Guggenheim Museum (1959) in Manhattan as a spiral of galleries rather than in angular array. America’s greatest architect can also be lauded for pioneering ideas that helped promote today’s sustainable thinking, even though he would not have thought himself an environmentalist intent on world-saving. He was rather an architect intent on affirming the relationship between the built and natural environments –– a green thought for sure.

View the whole story
(306.6 KB PDF document opens in new tab)