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Victor Steinbrueck

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Occupation
  
Architect

Buildings
  
Space Needle

Name
  
Victor Steinbrueck

Books
  
Market sketchbook

Role
  
Architect

Structures
  
Space Needle


Victor Steinbrueck httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb9

Born
  
December 15, 1911 (
1911-12-15
)
Mandan, North Dakota

Alma mater
  
University of Washington College of Architecture

Awards
  
American Institute of Architects Fellow

Practice
  
private, John Graham & Company

Projects
  
Pioneer Square and Pike Place Market preservation

Died
  
February 14, 1985, Seattle, Washington, United States

Spouse
  
Marjorie Nelson (m. ?–1985)

Education
  
University of Washington

Victor Steinbrueck Park, Seattle, WA


Victor Steinbrueck (December 15, 1911 - February 14, 1985) was a Seattle architect, and University of Washington faculty member, and best known for his efforts to preserve the city's Pioneer Square and Pike Place Market.

Contents

Victor Steinbrueck Victor Steinbrueck Life and Ideas HistoryLinkorg

Richard haag projects victor steinbrueck park


Biography

Steinbrueck was born in Mandan, North Dakota, and came to Seattle in 1913. In 1930 he enrolled in the University of Washington Program in Architecture, graduating in 1935 with a Bachelor of Architecture (B.Arch.). In this period he also worked in the Civilian Conservation Corps. After apprenticing in a number of private Seattle firms and serving in the military during World War II, he joined the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Washington in 1946. He also initiated his own practice and, over the next two decades, designed a series of regional-modernist residences, built with indigenous materials suited to the climate.

Steinbrueck's focus on the character of Seattle's architecture and urban places dates from the early 1950s when he authored A Guide to Seattle Architecture, published for American Institute of Architects national convention held in Seattle in 1953. Steinbrueck went on to publish several other books promoting awareness of the unique character of Seattle: Seattle Cityscape (1962; published to coincide with Century 21, the Seattle World's Fair), Market Sketchbook (1968), and Seattle Cityscape #2 (1973).

In the 1960s Steinbruck became active in historic preservation, and, with others, successfully fought developers' plans to obliterate Seattle's most significant historic district. He was instrumental in the creation of Seattle's first two historic districts, Pioneer Square (1970) and Pike Place Market (1971). His own projects were guided by a strong sense of public spirit and social consciousness: low-income housing, the inclusion of social services, and a number of city parks co-designed with landscape architect Richard Haag, including the one that now bears his name.

Working as a consultant to John Graham & Company, Steinbrueck played a key role in the design work of the Space Needle contributing the hour glass shape of the support structure. In 1963, Steinbrueck was elected a Fellow in the American Institute of Architects.

Publications

  • Steinbrueck, Victor, A Guide to Seattle Architecture, 1850-1953, Reinhold Publishing Co., New York 1953.
  • Steinbrueck, Victor, Seattle Cityscape, University of Washington Press, Seattle 1962
  • Steinbrueck, Victor, Market Sketchbook, University of Washington Press, Seattle 1968
  • Steinbrueck, Victor, Seattle Cityscape #2, University of Washington Press, Seattle and London 1973
  • Steinbrueck, Victor, and Nyberg, Folke, A Visual Inventory of Buildings and Urban Design Resources for Seattle, Washington, Historic Seattle Preservation and Development Authority, Seattle 1975-77. Available from Historic Seattle
  • References

    Victor Steinbrueck Wikipedia