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J. André Fouilhoux

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Name
  
J. Fouilhoux

Died
  
1945

Role
  
Architect

Structures
  
American Radiator Building

People also search for
  
Raymond Hood, John Mead Howells, Raymond Gindi, Joseph Chehebar, Philip Pilevsky

Jacques André Fouilhoux (1879–1945) was an engineer and architect from Paris, France who partnered with architects in Salem, Oregon and New York City. He was in the United States ca. 1904.

Contents

Career

In Oregon as part of the Whitehouse & Fouilhoux firm with Morris H. Whitehouse, he was involved in designing several projects in Portland, Oregon. These include Anna Lewis Mann Old People's Home the second Failing School (now the campus of the National University of Natural Medicine), the University Club, Elliott R. Corbett House, H. L. & Gretchen Hoyt Corbett House and the Seven Hundred Five Davis Street Apartments He is also credited as a partner in the Conro Fiero House in Central Point, Oregon and the Methodist Church in Astoria.

In New York he worked with Raymond Hood (1881–1934) starting ca. 1923 and worked on projects including the American Radiator Building. He was a partner in the Godley, Fouilhoux, and Barber firm; Hood & Fouilhoux; and the Hood, Godley & Fouilhoux firm. Projects he worked on included St. Vincent de Paul Asylum in Tarrytown, New York, the Masonic Temple in Scranton, Pennsylvania, the McGraw-Hill Building in New York City, and Rockefeller Center in New York City. After Hood's death in 1934 Fouilhoux joined Wallace K. Harrison (1895–1981) and "contributed to the New York World's Fair," as well as on the Fort Greene and Clinton Hill housing developments in New York City during the 1940s.

Works

  • American Radiator Building, New York City, 1924
  • St. Vincent de Paul Asylum in Tarrytown, New York, 1924
  • Masonic Temple in Scranton, Pennsylvania, 1928
  • Rockefeller Center in New York City, 1930
  • McGraw-Hill Building, New York City, 1931
  • New York World's Fair, New York City, 1939
  • References

    J. André Fouilhoux Wikipedia