Robert Little (architect)

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Robert Andrews Little (1919–2005) was a prominent modernist architect based in Cleveland, Ohio. He received the Cleveland Arts Prize for Architecture in 1965. Little practiced in the Bauhaus and International styles. He also designed and advocated energy-efficient features, and employed Jewish and African-American architects and engineers.[1]

Born in Boston, he was a direct descendant of Paul Revere. Little studied with Marcel Breuer and Walter Gropius.[1] He graduated from Harvard in 1937 and received continued there completing his masters 1939.[1]

Little came to Cleveland in 1947.[1] He taught at Case Western Reserve University’s school of architecture.[1]

His firm, Little & Associates, merged with Dalton·Dalton Associates in 1969.[1] He was married to Ann Halle Little.[2]

Work[]

The former Halle Brothers department store at Shaker Square was Little's first commission. It was built in 1948 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
  • Halle Brothers Shaker Square department store (1949), located between the Shaker Square Cinemas and the rapid transit station, was his first commission. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and won the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce Award for Commercial Building as well as the Architects’ Society of Ohio Medal for Commercial Building.
  • Albert Pick Music Library at the University of Miami
  • in Canton, Ohio
  • Little invented and patented a pre-computer design tool called Solux "that allowed him to trace the path of the sun over a cardboard model mechanically, instead of having to use laborious mathematical calculations," used for lighting calculations.[1]
  • Steel home prototype, on roof of Department Store in Pittsburgh.
  • All-electric home prototype for Westinghouse Corporation.
  • development in Pepper Pike, Ohio, including a converted barn studio for Cleveland sculptor William McVey (a design that received the Progressive Architecture award).
  • Community Health Foundation facility in University Circle (later occupied by Kaiser Permanente and then as the Community Dialysis Center)
  • Jane Addams High School
  • Case Institute of Technology dorms along Cedar Hill
  • Buildings for Hawken School’s upper school campus in Gates Mills
  • Cleveland Municipal School District’s spherical Supplementary Education Center (and planetarium) on Lakeside Avenue
  • , Twinsburg, Ohio (became part of CVS)
  • United States Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
  • Cleveland's Metro General Hospital's twin towers (now MetroHealth Medical Center)
  • Master plan for the revitalization of area around including the hospital's new buildings. (The plan won Progressive Architecture's urban design award).
  • Jetport plan for Lake Erie landfill [1]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Robert Little Cleveland Arts Prize
  2. ^ Segall, Grant (January 20, 2012). "Ann Halle Little--heiress, architect, pilot, volunteer". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved September 19, 2012.
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