Edward Durell Stone
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Edward Durell Stone (né en 1902 à Fayetteville en Arkansas, mort en 1978 à New York) était un architecte américain moderniste du vingtième siècle.
Stone a fréquenté l'Université d'Arkansas, Harvard et le Massachusetts Institute of Technology pour ensuite fonder son entreprise à New York en 1936.
Ouvrages importants:
- Radio City Music Hall, dans le Rockefeller Center, New York (1932)
- Museum of Modern Art, the Rockefeller family's modern art museum, New York City, (with Philip S. Goodwin, 1939)
- Ingersoll Steel, Utility Unit House, Kalamazoo (1946)
- Fine Arts Center, Université de l'Arkansas (1950)
- Harvey Mudd College (1955)
- Edward Durell Stone House, New York City (1956)
- Park Lane Residence, Dallas (1956)
- United States Embassy, New Delhi, India (1958)
- US Pavilion at Expo 58, Brussels (1958)
- Robert M. Hughes Memorial Library, Old Dominion University (1959)
- Gulf Oil Gasoline Station, John F. Kennedy International Airport, (1959)
- Arie Crown Theater, Chicago (1960, altered 1997)
- 2 Columbus Circle, New York City (1962, altered 2006)
- Beckman Auditorium, California Institute of Technology (1964)
- National Geographic Building, Washington, DC (1964)
- Ponce Museum of Art, Ponce, Puerto Rico (1964)
- Claremont School of Theology (1965)
- Busch Stadium, Saint-Louis (1966, demolished 2005)
- Garden State Arts Center, Holmdel (New Jersey) (1968)
- State University of New York at Albany (1968)
- Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts Washington, DC (1971)
- Aon Center (formerly Standard Oil Building), Chicago (1972)
- Fort Worth City Hall (1975)
- Florida State Capitol (1977)
- Carlson Terrace, Fayetteville (Arkansas) (1977)
- University of Alabama School of Law, Tuscaloosa (Alabama) (1977)
- PepsiCo World Headquarters Complex, Purchase
[modifier] See also
- Rockefeller Center
- Rockefeller family
- Museum of Modern Art