Koenig Final
Koenig Final
Koenig Final
PIERRE KOENIG
LIVING WITH STEEL
Neil Jackson
2007 TASCHEN GmbH Hohenzollerning 53, D-50672 Kln www.taschen.com Editor Peter Gossel, Bremen Project management Katrin Schumann, Bremen Design and layout McKenzie Marston Text edited by Christiane Blass, Cologne Printed in Kansas City, MO ISBN 978-8228-4891-3
EVERYBODY WAS VERY IDEALISTIC. EVERYBODY WANTED TO PRODUCE ANSWERS TO THE HOUSING.
Pierre Koenig
CONTENTS
6 16 20 26 34 42 50 56 62 70 74 80 86 92 95 96
Introduction Koenig House #1 Lamel House Bailey House (Case Study House #21) Seidel House Stahl House (Case Stufy House #21) Johnson House Oberman House Iwata House Chemehuevi Prefabricated Housing Tract Burton Pole-House Koenig House #2 Schwartz House Life and Work Map Bibliography/ The Author/ Credits
INTRODUCTION
PERHAPS THAT IS THE LASTING SIGNIFICANCE OF THIS HOUSE; IT IS AN ENDURING STATEMENT OF HOPE AND EXPECTATION.
Few images of twentieth-century architecture are more iconic than the nighttime view of Pierre Koenigs Case Study House #22, set on its eagles-nest site high above the lights of Los Angeles.Yet neither the house, nor the photograph which captured it, were in fact as they appear. The house was unfinished and full of plaster dust, the furniture, including Koenigs own architectural pottery, was borrowewomen, one a ucla under-graduate and the other a senior at Pasadena High School, poised in conversation inside; in fact, the city lights can actually be read through their white evenin dresses. But the picture which first appeared on the front cover of the Sunday Pictorial section of the Los Angeles Examiner on 17 July 1960 was symbolic. Like so much popular music, it caught the spirit of the moment, the Zeitgeist: Los Angeles, the city of angels at the dawn of the 1960s and the Kennedy era. It was a decade which, for America, started with so much hope but ended in so much chaos. Perhaps that is the lasting significance of this house; it is an enduring statement of hope and expectation.
Pierre Koenig was born in San Francisco on 17 October 1925; his parents were both secondgeneration immigrants, his mother of French descent and his father of German, hence the European name. In 1939, while still at high school, he moved with his family to Los Angeles, to the San Gabriel valley just south of Pasadena, where he found everything, in contrast to San Francisco, to be warm, sunny and colourful...new and bright and clean, especially the architecture1 Soon after, in 1941, the United States entered the War and Koenig, then aged just seventeen, enlisted in the u.s. Army Advanced Special Training Program, which promised an accelerated college education. But in 1943, after just a few months at the University of Utah, the programme was cancelled and Koenig was sent to Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia. Active service in France and Germanyas a flash ranging observer with the duty to spot enemy gunfire and calculate, through triangulation, their positionkept him in Europe until well after ve Day, and it was not until 1946 that he was shipped back to the United States on the Cunard Liner Queen Mary. On that journey he shunned the squalor of the troops quarters below decks for a bed-roll in a lifeboat.
1) Pierre Koenig, quoted in James Steele and David Jenkins, Pierre Koenig, Phaidon Press, London, 1998
(right/above) Pierre Koenigs perspective drawing of Raphael Sorianos Case Study House 1950
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(left) Bethlehem Steel exhibition pavilion, 1962 (below) Seidel Beach House, Malibu, California, 1961
...RECOGNIZED A RATIONAL, INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE WHICH REFLECTED HIS OWN BELIEFS AND THUS CONFIRMED, FOR HIM, THE CORRECTNESS OF HIS DIRECTION.
The gi Bill granted Koenig the financial support to undertake college training and, after two years at Pasadena City College, he finally gained admittance to the architecture programme at the University of Southern California. Although progressive in many ways, the programmes adherence to timber framing frustrated Koenig, and as a thirdyear student he proceeded to build his first house using the industrial material steel. It occurred to me, he later recalled, that houses that were very slender were meant to be in steel, not wood.2 It was not surprising then, that rather than seeking work with Richard Neutra, at that time probably the doyen of southern California architects, Koenig should turn instead to another usc graduate, Raphael Soriano. As he later said, I needed a summer job so I naturally went to him. And because I had something to offer him and he to me, I worked for him for that summer.3 It was a mutually beneficial arrangement.
2) Ibid. 3) Pierre Koenig interviewed by Neil Jackson, 13 July 1988
In that summer of 1950, while Koenig was building his own house in Glendale, Soriano had four lightweight steel-framed houses underway on site or in the design stage: the Shulman House and the Curtis House were almost complete, and the Olds House and the Krause House were in process. Here Koenig recognized a rational, industrial architecture which reflected his own beliefs and thus confirmed, for him, the correctness of his direction. Sorianos drawings, often in crayon and pencil, rarely caught the crispness which so characterized these buildings, so Koenig prepared for him the perspective drawings of the Olds House which were published in John Entenzas magazine Arts & Architecture that August as the Case Study House of 1950. Even at this early stage, Koenigs drawings are instantly recognizable. Constructed in black line and two-point perspective, they are as spare and brittle as the houses they portrayed.
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The seven-minute exposure Julius Shulmans photograph of Case Study House #22
The Case Study House Program was the single most significant initiative in post-war Californian architecture and had world-wide influence. John Entenza, who later became director of the Graham Foundation in Chicago, used the magazine Arts & Architecture, of which he was both proprietor and editor, to promote a modern, affordable architecture for the post-war years. By publishing selected houses month by month, as they were being designed and then built, he provided publicity for the architect and advertising for the contractors and manufacturers. The benefit to the client was that the materials were supplied at a substantially reduced cost but, in return, the clients had to open their houses to the public for viewing. The houses were not commissioned by the magazine, but selected by Entenza. As Koenig later said, John Entenza asked me to come in one day and he said to me, Pierre, if you ever have a good house with some good clients tell me and well make it a Case Study House. Well I did and that was Case Study House 21.4 With his two Case Study Houses, Koenig completed the run of eight steel-framed buildings which, in a period of just over ten years, gave the Case Study House Program its reputation. First was the Eames House (csh#8), by Charles and Ray Eames, and then its neighbour, the Entenza House (csh#9) by Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen. They were both completed in 1549. Sorianos Olds House was the Case Study House for 1950. The next three were by Craig Ellwood: the Saizman House (csh#i6) in 1953, the Hoffman House (csh#iy) in 1956, and the Fields House (csh#i8) in 1958. Case Study House #21 was opened to the public in January of the following year and then, as Koenig recalled, John said well do another one. We did Case Study House #22, which is on an eagles-nest site in the Hollywood hills.5 The Case Study House Program promised so much but ultimately it delivered so little: it was, as Peter Reyner Banham wrote in Los Angeles, The Architecture of Four Ecologies, The Style That Nearly But Koenig was not interested in style. That his architecture is seen as having a recognizable style was the result of his rational single-mindedness and the product of later critical readings. When he built his first house in Glendale, he was simply following what he thought was a logical course. As he later said, This was the same time Charles Eames was doing his building in the Palisades and the same time, so far as I know, Mies was doing Farnsworth House. And none of us, I think, had any inkling of what the other was doing. Looking back thirty years later, Koenig recalled the feelings of the time.
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Framed inscreen patios allow the house to merge with the landscape
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A lot of things went on in Los Angeles that were not really considered to be of any great significance in terms of art or architecture in the world. Music was that same way. The fact that Stravinsky and Schoenberg had played here and were having concerts at ucla was of no great significance. Nothing was going on here that was of any great significance until nownow we look back and we see all these things being important. But you have to understand that at the time there was great excitement, the war was over, everybody was very idealistic. Everybody wanted to produce answers to housing problems. Everybody was going into mass production systems, social problems were being addressed. It was an exciting period of time and all kinds of things were being tried. 7
4) Ibid. 5) Ibid.
6) Ibid. 7) Ibid.
The Case Study House Program was the single most significant initiative in post-war Californian architecture and had world-wide influence. John Entenza, who later became director of the Graham Foundation in Chicago, used the magazine Arts & Architecture, of which he was both proprietor and editor, to promote a modern, affordable architecture for the post-war years. By publishing selected houses month by month, as they were being designed and then built, he provided publicity for the architect and advertising for the contractors and manufacturers. The benefit to the client was that the materials were supplied at a substantially reduced cost but, in return, the clients had to open their houses to the public for viewing. The houses were not commissioned by the magazine, but selected by Entenza. As Koenig later said, John Entenza asked me to come in one day and he said to me, Pierre, if you ever have a good house with some good clients tell me and well make it a Case Study House. Well i did and that was Case Study House 21. With his two Case Study Houses, Koenig completed the run of eight steelframed buildings which, in a period of just over ten years, gave the Case Study House Program its reputation. First was the Eames House (csh#8), by Charles and Ray Eames, and then its neighbour, the Entenza House (csh#9) by Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen. They were both completed in 1549. Sorianos Olds House was the Case Study House for 1950. The next three were by Craig Ellwood: the Saizman House (csh#16) in 1953, the Hoffman House (csh#17) in 1956,and the Fields House (csh#8) in 1958. Case Study House #21 was opened to the public in January of the following year and then, as Koenig recalled, John said well do another one. We did Case Study House #22, which is on an eagles-nest site in the Hollywood hills.5
The Case Study House Program promised so much but ultimately it delivered so little: it was, as Peter Reyner Banham wrote in Los Angeles, The Architecture of Four Ecologies, The Style That Nearly... But Koenig was not interested in style. That his architecture is seen as having a recognizable style was the result of his rational single-mindedness and the product of later critical readings. When he built his first house in Glendale, he was simply following what he thought was a logical course. As he later said, This was the same time Charles Eames was doing his building in the Palisades and the same time, so far as I know, Mies was doing Farnsworth House. And none of us, I think, had any inkling of what the other was doing. Looking back thirty years later, Koenig recalled the feelings of the time.
5) Ibid.
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A lot of things went on in Los Angeles that were not really considered to be of any great significance in terms of art or architecture in the world. Music was that same way. The fact that Stravinsky and Schoenberg had played here and were having concerts at ucla was of no great significance. Nothing was going on here that was of any great significance until nownow we look back and we see all these things being important. But you have to understand that at the time there was great excitement, the war was over, everybody was very idealistic. Everybody wanted to produce answers to housing problems. Everybody was going into mass production systems, social problems were being addressed. It was an exciting period of time and all kinds of things were being tried. Musicor soundwas, for Koenig, part of his development. The war had left its memories. In 1999 he confided to Steve Roden that he had just purchased the engine sounds of a Messerschmitt 1090 which produces the most awsome manmade noise in the world. There are two overlapping major elements, a very, very ear-splitting roar with a high-frequency nasty tappet overlay. Distinguishable from any other aircraft in the world. Combine that with the sound of machine guns firing and you have the ultimate psychological effect not easily forgotten. More peacefully, he had discovered music when, as a fourteen-year-old, he heard Igor Stravinskys Rite of Spring on the radio. The more I listened to music, the more I wanted the newer stuff.9 In the end his music collection numbered almost 6,000 records, and the music room was as important to his new house in Brentwood, Los Angeles, as were the acoustics of the atrium space where he would play it. When in 1958 Koenig built a radio station for kyob in Biythe, California, he demonstrated an early understanding not just of acoustics, but also of flexible system building: here the floor deck was raised and could be removed for the routing and rerouting of cables. Designed with a steel frame between concrete block sidewalls, it combined an uninterrupted, multi-purpose rentable ground-floor space with the radio station above. On the front elevation, the glazed lower floor contrasted with the smoothly rendered faade above, thus declaring the privacy and acoustic isolation of the broadcasting studio and control room within.
Koenigs structural engineer on the kyob radio station building was William Porush, who was to work with Koenig on all his completed buildings, from the first house in Glendale through to the West House at Vallejo, near San Francisco, in 1970. Thereafter, his position was briefly taken by Tom Harris for the Burton Pole-House at Malibu, and then for the next ten years by Dimitry Vergun. Only in the last two or three years did he use other engineers: Norman Epstein for the addition to his neighbour Jeffrey Ressners house on Dorothy Street in Brentwood; Ficcadenti & Waggoner for the LaFetra House and the Koppany Pool House; and Rubicon Engineering for the Tarassoly & Mehran House. From the beginning, Porush, whom Koenig readily credited when the buildings were eventually published, facilitated his ideas and enabled him to work far beyond the confines of the steel and glass domestic architecture for which he is largely remembered. As he said, Im always trying new materials. 10 The Seidel Beach House, built in 1961 at Malibu, was, like the later Burton Pole-House, a timberframe building which used steel cross-bracing rods to stabilize the structure.
9) Ibid., p.128
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The mobile exhibition pavilion built the next year for Bethlehem Steel was of steel and timber and was designed for easy assembly and dismantling. It travelled the United States for two years and, in 1964, won an award in Portland, Oregon, for Best Exhibition Building. The Mosque, commissioned in 1963 by the Moslem Association of America for a site in Hollywood, was to have a prefabricated pre-stressed concrete frame with brick infill walls. This would have been Koenigs only concrete-frame building, but it was never built. The Electronic Enclosures Incorporated Factory and Showroom at El Segundo, built in 1966 on a scale hitherto not attempted, used longspan open-web trusses to provide a column-free internal space with tilt-up concrete panels and glazed walls to enclose it. And then, for the West House Koenig specified Corten, a steel that rusts. Built as the first of a speculative, modernist development, it promised a great opportunity for Koenig to exploit his interest in prefabrication and multiple unit design, but the client died before the house could be occupied and the development was never begun.
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1994 -1996
SCHWARTZ HOUSE
In building his own house in Brentwood, Koenig recongnised and exploited the opportunity of building upwards which small suburban sites probided. When talking about that house, he observed when interviewed, Im looking forward to going even higher than this on my next job. The next job was the house he built in Pacific Palisdaes, Los Angeles, for Martin Schwartz and his wife. At first glance the Schwartz house appears to be a rather curious structure, uncertain in its domestic imagery. Robustly metallic, it is a silver cube turned or twisted within a black steel frame. Yet exactly the same observations could have been made thirty-five years earlier about the designs for the Case Study House, which might have been mistaken, by the uniformed, for petrol filling stations were it not that their locations made this unlikely. Thus to understand the Schwartz house, it is necessary to investigate the architectural intentions.
The site for this house was a small plot of land on the sloping southeast side of Chautuaque Canyon, a narrow, wooded valley which runs inland from the ocean and Pacific Coast Highway to the west. And it is this position and topography which determied the form of the house. Firstly, to achieve adequate floorspace, Koenig had to raise the house by once storey, allowing the sloping land to flow under the site while at the same time releasing enough space for a double garage. This accoundted for the frame. Secondly, in order to achieve views down the canyon and to capture the cooling ocean breezes as well as, in winter, the late afternoon sun, he had to set the building askew to line of the street. So the house was turned 30 degrees within its frame. By this simple manipulation Koenig suddenly freed up the restrictions which a square plan set in line with the street would have implied. The rotation of the house plan on topof the frame plan exposed residual spaces around each column which were adopted, in once corner, for the spiral stairs and in the opposite corner for a deck and balcony above. Access now need be neither straight to the front or, at right angles, to the side but could be achieved tangentially where the corner of the cube pushed out from within the frame. Beneath the cube, Koenig nestled the nose of the garage, the roof of which became a terrace or patio, and beyond that, in the undercroft, he slipped in the utility roon. In 1996, a further bedroom and bathroom were added within this space. Here any sense of basement is quickly dispelled by the fully glazed wall, which can be withdrawn to open the new bedroom to the garden outside.
While the frame aligns with the site, the house turns to take advantage of the location.
(top)The house from the street, with the garage in the foreground. (right)The entranceway to the house
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1985
KOENIG HOUSE #2
12221 Dorthy Street, Los Angelese, California
Koenigs attitude towards his buildings was protective. They were, as he had said, his children. So it is not surprising that when the Seidel House was extended in 1984 and again in 1994, it was to Koenig that the new owners turned. The house was built as a speculation by Tom Seidel, a building contractor, and Jean Hagan and it was Seidel who again took on the job when the house was first extended twenty-four years later. The site was not promising: a long, narrow shelf with unstable soil conditions cut out of the steep gradient on the west side of Mandeville Canyon. To accommodate this, Koenig reduced the structure to a minimum number of point loads supported on concrete caissons sunk 15 feet into the ground. The result was a steel frame comprising six bents, each spanning 24 feet and made up of 4-inch H-section columns and id-inch 1-section beams. These were placed irregularly at 32-foot and 16-foot centres, thus defining the larger living and sleeping zones and the smaller, internal courtyards or patios which separated them. An end bay of 20 feet accommodated the carport. The longer than usual 32-foot span was achieved by using 16-gauge Tsection steel roofing deck with a 6-inch web.
(above) The street-front entrance, with the office in the foreground and the house rising behind (left) Interior of living space
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1983
GANTERT HOUSE
6431 La Punta Drive, Los Angelese, California
Despite the considerable publicity which Arts & Architecture gave to his architecture, Koenig rarely received commissions from northern California. But Cyrus and Elizabeth Johnson had seen his houses in the magazine and determined to build one for themselves in northern California. Carmel Valley is in the hot hinterland, some ten miles from Carmel and the Pacific Ocean. Climatically, it was not unlike southern California, but it was an area where Spanish styles of architecture predominated. The site which the Johnsons had bought on La Rancheria faced south, was planted with live oaks, and sloped away from the road with views of distant rolling hills beyond. It was, in a sense, not unlike the site for the Case Study House #22, and Koenig treated it similarly. Instead of building a swimming pool, he levelled and strengthened the site by constructing an in-situ concrete single-storey structure which pushed out into the landscape and, once encased in back-fill, effectively became a basement. Then on top of this, at road level, he arranged the carport, entrance and sleeping accommodation along the northern edge and the kitchen and living room in a glazed, projecting wing to the south. Thus the L-shaped plan of the living accommodation was a mirror image of Case Study House #22. The only change was that he moved the entrance and carport to the other end of the bedroom wing, which gave the structure a T-shaped, rather than L-shaped, footprint.
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In the Case Study House, the carport had formed the entrance to the property rather than the building itself: that was accessed across the bridges along the side of the swimming pool. Here, at the Johnson House, a small workshop separated the bedroom wing from the carport and in so doing created a covered entranceway with a framed view along the west side of the living-room wing. Off this, at the point of juncture of the living and sleeping accommodation, was the entrance hall. Whereas at the Case Study House, the house was entered on the inside corner of the L-shaped plan, at the Johnson House it was entered on the outside. Yet in both cases, the position of the free-standing kitchen directed the visitor towards the living room and central fireplace beyond.
A LOT OF THINGS WENT ON IN LOS ANGELES THAT WERE NOT REALLY CONSIDERED TO BE OF ANY GREAT SIGNIFICANCE IN TERMS OF ART OR ARCHITECTURE IN THE WORLD.
A lot of things went on in Los Angeles that were not really considered to be of any great significance in terms of art or architecture in the world. Music was that same way. The fact that Stravinsky and Schoenberg had played here and were having concerts at UCLA was of no great significance. Nothing was going on here that was of any great significance until nownow we look back and we see all these things being important. But you have to understand that at the time there was great excitement, the war was over, everybody was very idealistic. Everybody wanted to produce answers to housing problems. Everybody was going into mass production systems, social problems were being addressed. It was an exciting period of time and all kinds of things were being tried. 7 Musicor soundwas, for Koenig, part of his development. The war had left its memories. In 1999 he confided to Steve Roden that he had just purchased the engine sounds of a Messerschmitt 1090 which produces the most awesome manmade noise in the world. The linear nature of the plan and the manner in which the different zones were separated by courtyard spaces was not unlike the plan adopted by Charles and Ray Eames in their Case Study House #8, built on a similarly narrow site in Pacific Palisades in 1949. Here, as in Koenigs solution, the caport was at one end and the living room and sheltered sun deck were at the other, while an external walkway ran the length of the house linking the disparate spaces. But there the similarities end for whereas the Eames House is noticeable for its fragility and colourful transparency, Koenigs design was robust and uncompromising. The 5-foot overhang at the south end and the deep sections of systems, social problems were being addressed. It was an exciting period of time and all kinds of things were being tried. 7 Musicor soundwas, for Koenig, part of his development. The war had left its memories. In 1999 he confided to Steve Roden that he had just purchased the engine sounds of a Messechmitt 1090 which produces the most awesome man-made noise in the world. There are two overlapping major elements, a very, very earsplitting roar with a high-frequency nasty tappet overlay. Distinguishable from any other aircraft in the world. Combine that with the sound of machine guns firing and you have the ultimate psychological effect not easily forgotten. More peacefully, he had discovered music when, as a fourteen-yearold, he heard Igor Stravinskys Rite of Spring on the radio. The more I listened to music, the more I wanted the newer stuff. 9 In the end his music collection numbered almost 6,000 records, and the music room was as important to his new house in Brentwood, Los Angeles, as were the acoustics of the atrium space where he would play it.
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MAP
Glendale Koenig House #1 Lamel House
Bailey Larnel Koenig #1
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Anon, Small House by Pierre Koenig, Designer, Arts & Architecture, January 1954
Anon, Steel Frame House, Arts & Architecture, June 1955 Anon, An Economical House Results from an Adventurous Spirit, Living for Young Homemakers, February 1956
Gantert
Los Angeles Bailey House (csh #21) Beagles House Gantert House Koenig House #2 Schwartz House Seidel House Stahl House (csh #22) Malibu Burton Pole-House Monterey Park Iwata House Palos Verdes Oberman House
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Anon, Framed and roofedin 2 days, Sunset, the Magazine of Western Living, April 1959 Alison Arieff and Bryan Burkhart, Pre Fab, Gibbs Smith, Utah, 2000 Eryn Brown, A Case Study in Stewardship, Los Angeles Times, 4 August 2005
Los Angeles
Peggy Cochran, Koenig, St. James Press, Andover/Detroit, 1988 Pierre Koenig, Johnson House, written description, unpublished mss., no date Pierre Koenig, Low-Cost Production House, Arts & Architecture, March 1957
Obeman
Brandon LaBelle and Steve Roden, Site of Sound: of Architecture & the Ear, Errant Bodies Press, Los Angeles, 1999 Esther McCoy, Steel around the Pacific, Los Angeles Examiner, Pictorial Living, 25 February 1956 Esther McCoy, What I believe A statement of architectural principles by Pierre Koenig, Los Angeles Times Home Magazine, 21 July 1957 National Steel Corporation, I built this house of steel for many reasons, Time, 9 April 1956, and Newsweek, 16 April 1956 Christopher Reed, Pierre Koenig, The Independent, 2004 Elizabeth Smith A.T., Case Study Houses, Taschen, Cologne, 2006 Elizabeth Smith A.T., Case Study Houses. The Complete CSH Program 19451966, Taschen, Cologne, 2002 James Steele and David Jenkins, Pierre Koenig, Phaidon Press, London, 1998 Margaret Stovall, Home of the Week, Independent Star-News, 31 August 1958
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Pierre Koenig, Modern Production House, Arts & Architecture, January 1961
1956
Worked for Jones and Emmons
1961
Joined the Department of Architecture, University of Southern, Los Angeles, California Seidel Beach House, Malibu, California Willheim House, Los Angeles, California Prefabricated House, St Jean, Quebec, Canada
1966
Electronic Enclosures Incorporated Factory and Showroom, El Segundo, California
1957
2 October, passed California State Board of Examiners Licensing Exams in Architecture 23 December, elected member of the American Institute of Architectures (aia) Sao Paolo Bienale iv Exhibition Awards (First Prize), Sao Paolo, Brazil
1939
Moved with family to Los Angeles, California
1943
Attended School of Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah
1967 aia Southern California Chapter Architectural Grand Prix for 36 Best Buildings
in Los Angeles since 1947
1943-1946
Flash Ranger Observer, US Army
1968
Appointed Associate Professor, Department of Architecture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, and granted tenure
1946-1948
Attended Pasadena City College, Pasasdena, California
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1958
11 February, elected member of the AIA Southern California Chapter Divorced Merry Thompson Radio Station KYOR, Blythe, California Metcalf House, Los Angeles, California Bailey House (Case Study House #21), Los Angeles, California
1970
West House, Vallejo California
1948-1952
Attended Department of Architecture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California
1963
AIA- House and Home magazine Award American Institute of Iron and Steel Award Iwata House, Monterey Park, California Mosque (project), Los Angeles, California Beagles House, Los Angeles, California
1971
Elected to College of Fellows of the aia
1950
2 August, Graduated as bachelor of Architecture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California Set up private practice
1971-1976
Chemehuevi Prefabricated Housing Tract, Lake Havasu, California
1959
AIA- Sunset magazine Honor Award Western Construction magazine Honor Award
1973
Franklyn Medical Building, West Hollywood, California
1964
Appointed Assistant Professor, Department of Architecture, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California Best Exhibition Building Award, Portland, Oregon
1953
Married Merry Thompson; one child, Randall Francis Koenig, in 1954 Lamel House, Gledale, California Squire House, La Canada, California Scott House, Tujunga, California
1960
AIA- House and Home magazine Award Married Gaile Carson; one child, Jean Pierre Koenig, in 1961 Stahl House (Case Study House #22), Los Angeles, California Seidel House, Los Angeles, California
1975
Divorced Gaile Carson
1979
Burton Pole- House, Malibu, California
1981
Zapata Restaurant and Disco (Franklyn Dinner Club), Thousand Oaks, California
Pierre on site
CREDITS
Magazine Arts & Architecture. All illustrations courtesy of David Travers: 8 both Peter Gssel, Bremen: 87 Gssel und Partner, Bremen: 95 Neil Jackson: 14 both, 15 both Pierre Koenig estate: 4, 10, 11 both, 12, 13, 17 left, 18 bottom, 22 bottom, 24, 27 bottom, 28 bottom, 29 bottom, 30 left, 34 (photo Richard Fish), 36 bottom, 37 (photo Richard Fish), 38 bottom, 43 bottom, 44 bottom, 46 bottom, 49 bottom, 56 (photo Leland Lee) 58 bottom, 59 (photo Leland Lee), 60 (photo Leland Lee), 61 (photo Leland Lee), 63, 64, 65 left, 67 middle, 67 bottom, 68 bottom, 70 both, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 77, 79 top left, 79 bottom, 81, 82 both, 84, 85 bottom, 91 all, 92, 93 both, 94 both John Edward Linden/arcaid.co.uk: 33 both Photography Juergen Nogai, Santa Monica, CA: 38 top, 39, 40 both, 41, 66, 67 top, 68 top, 69 both Juergen Nogai/Julius Shulman: 50, 52 top, 53 both, 54, 55 top J. Paul Getty Trust. used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute, 2, 6, 16, 17 top, 18 top, 19 both, 20, 22 top, 23, 25, 26, 27 top, 28 top, 29 top, 30 right, 31 both, 32, 42, 43 top, 44 top, 45, 46 top, 47, 48, 49 top, 58 top, 62, 65 top, 76, 78, 79 top right, 80, 83, 85 top, 86, 88, 89, 90, 92 James Steele and David Jenkins: Pierre Koenig, Phaidon, London, 1998, 52 bottom, 55 bottom
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I am particularly grateful for the guidance and assistance given to me by Gloria Koenig and by Jan Ipach, and to all those owners of a Koenig house who, over the years, have shown me their homes or talked so enthusiastically about them. Without their help, this book could not have been written.
THE AUTHOR
Neil Jackson is a British architect and architectural historian who has written extensively on modern architecture in California, where he taught between 1985 and 1990. His 2002 book Graig Ellwood won the Sir Banister Fletcher Award in 2003. This study of Pierre Koenig is the result of a long friendship and a mark of respect for a great architect. Professor Jackson currently teaches at the University of Liverpool.
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