Marcel Breuer Papers, 1921-2001
Collection context
Summary
- Creator:
- Breuer, Marcel, 1902-1981.
- Abstract:
- Papers of the Modernist architect and designer, includes architectural drawings, photographs and slides, project files, writings, correspondence and other materials related to every phase of Marcel Breuer's career.
- Extent:
- 684 linear ft.
- Language:
- Majority in English , some items in French , German , Hungarian , Spanish , Italian , Japanese
- Preferred citation:
-
Preferred citation for this material is as follows:
Marcel Breuer Papers,
Background
- Scope and content:
-
The Marcel Breuer Papers collects over sixty years of work product generated by a prolific international architectural practice spanning a large part of the twentieth century. The comprehensive collection includes architectural drawings, photographs, project files, published materials, writings, interviews and other materials from every phase of Marcel Breuer's long and distinguished career. In addition, the collection contains biographical material, material related to Breuer's teaching days at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design, and material representing his many professional endeavors including awards, exhibitions, writings on architecture and correspondence with artists, architects, editors and clients.
Material in the Personal papers series ranges from Breuer's days as an instructor at the Bauhaus in Dessau to the centenary celebration of his birth held at St. John's University in 2001/2002. The bulk of the material consists of Financial records from his early years in the United States (1937-1943).
The Professional papers series collects material related to Breuer's professional endeavors as an architect and includes records related to awards, exhibitions and juries, as well as non-project related correspondence with important artists, architects, editors and patrons. Additional project related material can be found in the writings and publications subseries, and in the scrapbooks of press clippings and memorabilia that Breuer maintained through the 1940s.
Faculty papers contains administrative and course material from Breuer's years on the faculty of the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University (1939-1948).
The vast bulk of the Office records series consists of interoffice correspondence between Breuer's New York and Paris offices between the years 1964-1978. In addition, there are Financial documents and bills, most of which date from the late 1930s to the early 1950s (including small amounts of material from the Breuer-Yorke and Breuer-Gropius partnerships), and extensive travel files (1938-1970) documenting travel arrangements, schedules, contact lists and itineraries for Breuer's many travels during these years. The Administrative Records sub-series includes the Marcel Breuer and Associates partnership agreement and miscellaneous files related to Breuer's architectural licenses.
Sketchbooks contains a number of Breuer's sketchbooks with designs for houses (exteriors and interiors), furniture, and more. All drawings have been digitized and can be found in the Marcel Breuer Digital Archive.
The Furniture series collects materials related to Breuer's furniture designs and furniture business dealings. This series contains several hundred original furniture drawings, and represents the four major phases of Breuer's furniture work -- wood, tubular steel, aluminum and bent plywood.. This series also contains Correspondence (1920s-1960s) with manufacturers and distributors of Breuer furniture (Thonet, Embru, Isokon, Gavina), correspondence with patent attorneys and agencies (including patent applications and drawings), as well as Financial documents, license agreements and contracts. There are a few files related to furniture design competitions, as well as furniture photographs and slides, articles and clippings. Of special note in the Published materials series are several early furniture catalogs from Thonet and Wohnbedarf, including the Herbert Bayer designed Wohnbedarf aluminum furniture catalog.
The Project records series contains the vast bulk of the collection and consists of architectural drawings, project files (correspondence, specifications, Financial records, product literature), published materials and photographs documenting the process of architectural design development, project construction and subsequent presentation/reception of completed projects. The extent of documentation varies by project, but the entirety of Breuer's career is represented, including his earliest architectural work at the Bauhaus (1923-1928), his subsequent work as an independent architect in Berlin (1928-1931), his work in Budapest in partnership with Farkas Molnár and József Fischer (1933-1935), his work in London in partnership with F.R.S. Yorke (1935-1937), his early work in the U.S. in partnership with Walter Gropius (1937-1941) and, by far the majority of the collection, his work as an independent architect and head of the firm Marcel Breuer and Associates (1941-1976). In addition, the collection contains significant project work accomplished by the firm Marcel Breuer Associates after Breuer's retirement in 1976, as well as work completed by his associates under the name BreuerA after his death in 1980. [See Biographical History above for additional information on Breuer's associated firms and partnerships.]
An Alphabetical index of projects and name variants is provided at the end of this finding aid.
- Biographical / historical:
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Marcel Lajos Breuer (1902-1981) was a Hungarian-born American Modernist architect and designer.
Marcel Breuer was born on May 21, 1902 in the southwestern Hungarian city of Pécs. His family home at 4 Irgalmasok Boulevard near Szechenyi square may have afforded a view of the nearby Pasha Qasim mosque (built from the ruins of a Gothic church), or the four landmark towers of the nearby Pécs Cathedral. Noted historically for its diverse ethnic population, Pécs had long been a regional cultural center and a university town (home of the 5th oldest university in Europe), as well as an important religious center. Breuer's father Jakab Breuer was a dental technician from Gyor, Hungary. Breuer's mother, Franciska Kann (sometimes given as "Kan") came originally from Budapest. Breuer had two older siblings, Alexander and Hermina Maria.
Always reticent about the facts of his early life, Breuer's formative years must have been marked by the profound political conflicts that defined the era. He would have been just twelve years old when Hungary entered World War I as part of the Austro-Hungarian/German alliance (incidentally, Breuer's subsequent architectural mentor and partner, Walter Gropius, was severely wounded in 1914 while serving as a German reservist on the Western Front). From 1918-1920, the Baranyi region surrounding Breuer's home town was heavily occupied by Serbian forces who, on the basis of ethnic nationalism, had made significant territorial claims there (tentatively resolved by the Treaty of Trianon in 1920). Against this backdrop, Breuer attended secondary school at Pécsi Allami Forealiskola where he excelled at art and mathematics, graduating summa cum laude and earning a scholarship to the Akademie der Bildenden Kunst in Vienna.
Breuer arrived in Vienna in the late summer of 1920, but he quickly abandoned the academy, instead taking up an apprenticeship in the shop of a local cabinetmaker by the name of Bolek. It was during this brief respite that Breuer learned about an innovative new school in Weimar from a fellow Hungarian, the Pécs born architect Alfred Forbat. Within a few weeks, Breuer had assumed a place as one of the 143 students enrolled at the Bauhaus in only the second year of its formative existence.
While there is some uncertainty as to exactly when Breuer began his studies at the Bauhaus during the fall of 1920, it is very likely that he arrived about six weeks into the term and began in the Vorkurs, or Preliminary Course, then taught by Johannes Itten. Later that year, he would have done work in the carpentry workshop under Walter Gropius, the Master of Form for the shop at that time, and Josef Zachmann, the shop's first Master of Craft. While many of the personal relationships forged during these years were crucial for Breuer's artistic development, perhaps none more so than his career-defining linkage with Walter Gropius, it was quite possibly the painter Paul Klee who exerted the most formative influence (later in life, Breuer recollected that Klee had been one of the two most important teachers in his life, the other being his high school geometry teacher). As Franciscono contends, in his history of the school, " his [Klee's] lessons were conceived in terms closely analogous to those of architecture...painting itself was understood as a construction built up or put together from repeatable, more or less geometric -- in effect modular -- units in ways generally comparable to the way architecture is put together" (quoted in Hyman, p.61, n.73).
Breuer's architectural training at the Bauhaus came largely through apprentice work done in Walter Gropius' active practice, as the school offered no formalized program in architecture during those early years. As such, Breuer gained much hands-on experience on a number of projects -- contributing furniture and interior designs to the collaborative Sommerfeld House project (1921), the Haus am Horn exhibition house (1923), and the Bauhaussiedlung housing project (planned 1922, but not built).
After completing his apprentice work at the Bauhaus, Breuer headed to Paris, eventually landing a position in the office of Pierre Chareau in September of 1924. By the following year though, he was back in Weimar to accept a position as instructor and head of the furniture and carpentry shop at the Bauhaus, just prior to its official relocation to Dessau. In additional to involvement in furniture and interior design work for the new Bauhaus buildings in Dessau -- contributing to the design and furnishing of the canteen, theatre and several of the Master's Houses -- Breuer also developed innovative architectural schemes for a series of houses for junior faculty members, known as the BAMBOS houses (1927).
It was during this second period at the Bauhaus (1925-1928) that Breuer began to make the innovative experiments with bent tubular steel furniture for which he became so famous. The first version of his iconic "B3" club chair was developed around 1925, and many experiments with cantilevered steel constructions rapidly followed. In 1926, Breuer established the Standard Möbel company and began marketing a full line of steel furniture. Later that year, Breuer married fellow Bauhaus graduate Marta Erps, a talented artist who had studied in the weaving workshop and collaborated with Breuer on the Haus am Horm interiors. Their marriage seems to have been short lived, as Erps left Germany sometime around 1928-1929 for Brazil, where she later had a successful career as a biologist and illustrator at the University of São Paolo. Breuer and Erps were officially divorced in 1934.
As internal politics at the Bauhaus grew increasingly volatile in the late 1920s, Breuer joined a major exodus from the school, following Gropius, Moholy-Nagy, Josef Albers, Herbert Bayer and others out of Dessau. Breuer made his way to Berlin, officially joining the Bund Deutscher Architekten and setting up an architectural practice with a former student, Gustav Hassenpflug as his assistant. His commissions were small, primarily apartment and commercial interiors, but he also completed a number of formalized designs for competitions and was represented at many important exhibitions of the period, including the Weissenhof estate exhibition (1928), the Paris exposition of 1930 and the Berlin Building exhibition of 1931. In 1932, Breuer secured his first independent architectural commission to build a modern house in Wiesbaden for Paul and Marianne Harnischmacher. During this period, Breuer also maintained a partnership in Budapest with Farkas Molnár and József Fischer and traveled extensively through southern Europe and North Africa. In 1935, with the assistance of Gropius, Breuer secured papers to relocate to London where he practiced for a short time in partnership with British architect F.R.S. Yorke, while independently developing a line of bent plywood furniture that was marketed through Jack Pritchard's Isokon Control Ltd.
Frustrated by the limited building prospects in England and always concerned about the possibility of political deportation, in 1937 Breuer was again on the move. The efforts of Gropius were once more instrumental, as he was able to help secure for Breuer a faculty position at Harvard University's Graduate School of Design. Aesthetically, Breuer was well suited to his new environment, sharing with his fellow Bauhaus émigrés a strong appreciation for the structural transparency and efficient design of American industrial buildings. The strong appeal of the traditional New England domestic architecture, though, with its reliance on native stone and balloon-frame construction proved an unexpected source of inspiration for many of the European Modernists, Breuer included. He spent roughly the next decade making his mark with a series of iconic modern houses spread across Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania and New York (for more on the influence of American domestic architecture on Breuer's mid-century work, see Bergdall, "Encountering America: Marcel Breuer and the Discourses of the Vernacular from Budapest to Boston", in Marcel Breuer: Design and Architecture).
Initially, Breuer practiced in the U.S. in partnership with his long-time mentor under the official designation, "Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer, Architects." The partnership was relatively fruitful during lean economic years, producing a series of now canonical houses, including the Frank House in Pittsburgh (1939), the Hagerty House in Cohasset (1938) and, the Ford (1939), Gropius (1938) and Breuer (1939) houses at the Woods End colony in Lincoln, Massachusetts. In 1940, Breuer married his second wife, Constance Crocker Leighton. Connie, a native New Englander, had grown up in Salem, Massachusetts and attended the Brimmer School. Originally a secretary for Gropius and Breuer, she played an important role in the formative years of Breuer's Cambridge practice (for a brief period, her father, O.S. Leighton, also served as a sort of business manager and accountant for Breuer). Their son, Tamas (Thomas) Breuer was born in 1943.
The Gropius-Breuer partnership ended in 1941, and Breuer set-up shop on his own in Cambridge with the assistance of several of his former Harvard design students. Although work came slowly at first -- building supply shortages during the war made new construction a difficult endeavor -- by the mid-1940s, the Breuer office was operating at a robust pace.
Breuer took several of his Cambridge cohorts to New York in the spring of 1946, opening a practice there on 438 East Eighty-Eighth Street. The subsequent phase of work in the late 1940s marked the pinnacle of Breuer's domestic architectural production. Working from his fundamental conception of the "bi-nuclear" arrangement of living areas, Breuer progressively refined his design vocabulary into a popular signature style. Stand-out designs of this period include the Geller House I (1945), Robinson House (1948) and Thompson House (1949), as well and the House in the Museum Garden, constructed for a 1949 MoMA exhibition on the modern house.
The 1950s saw the exponential growth of Breuer's creative prospects and subsequent emergence internationally as a seminal figure of modern design (one of the canonical "form-givers" of the twentieth century, as dubbed in a 1956 Time magazine piece). In an astonishing creative outburst, encompassing roughly the ten year span from 1953-1963, Breuer saw the realization of the half-dozen or so masterworks most definitive of his major phase: the UNESCO headquarters in Paris (1953), Saint John's Abbey Church in Minnesota (1953-1958), the De Bijenkorf Department Store in Rotterdam (1953), the United States Embassy at the Hague (1956), the IBM Research Center in La Gaude, France (1960), and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York (1963). Breuer's work during this period was largely defined by the transition from small-form, residential projects in wood and stone, to monumental sculptural forms rendered in patterned concrete and steel.
In 1956, in order to accommodate the rapid boom in large-project commissions coming into his office, Breuer sought to formalize a partnership agreement with several of the young and talented architects in his employ. Stipulating a formative ten year period under the designation "associate", Breuer promised eventual full partnerships to his colleagues. Operating thereafter as Marcel Breuer and Associates, by 1967 Herbert Beckhard, Hamilton Smith and Robert Gatje had all achieved full partner status (former partner Murray Emslie had left the firm in 1965). Later, Tician Papachristou also achieved partner status in the firm.
By the mid-sixties, Breuer had settled his operations at 635 Madison Avenue in New York, and had opened a much needed European office on the Rue Chapon in the former garment district of Paris, an office established by Robert Gatje and later run by Mario Jossa to manage projects at Flaine, the ZUP development in Bayonne and elsewhere on the continent. During these years, Breuer's collaborative partnerships with Smith, Gatje, Beckhard and Papachristou reached their productive peak, yielding a formidable and diverse roster of works: the IBM France complex, the Flaine resort, the Armstrong Rubber Building with Robert F. Gatje; Annunciation Priory, the Whitney Museum of Art, the Grand Coulee Dam Project with Hamilton P. Smith; the HUD and HEW buildings in Washington, D.C. and the Church and Refectory of St. Francis de Sales with Herbert Beckhard; the Soriano House and Stillman House III, with Tician Papachristou.
The effects on Breuer of many years of incessant work and travel began to show by the early 1970s, and after a harrowing trip to Afghanistan that saw Breuer suffer a nearly fatal heart attack, his day-to-day working role in his firm significantly diminished. Breuer's declining health coincided with a difficult economic climate for building; regardless, Marcel Breuer and Associates continued to realize significant building projects throughout the seventies, including the Atlanta Public Library (1971-1980), the American Press Institute in Reston, Virginia (1971), and the Australian Embassy in Paris (1973, with Harry Seidler). These years also saw the realization of two late-phase minor masterpieces -- the third Stillman House (1972) and the stunning slate-roofed Chapel at Flaine (1974-1976). Despite his formal retirement on March 1, 1976, Breuer refused to abandon work altogether, characteristically vowing to his supervising architect at the Baldegg Convent site that he would remain on the project until it was done. The last decade of Breuer's life saw a number of prominent honors and exhibitions of his work. In addition to an honorary doctorate from the Budapest Technical University in 1970, there were major exhibitions at MoMA (1981) and at the Bauhaus-Archiv Museum in 1975 (the first exhibition of his work in Germany since his days at the Bauhaus), as well as a major retrospective exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (1972-1973), the first ever one-man architectural show in the Met's history. Marcel Breuer died July 1, 1981.
[In addition to material from the collection, this account relied on: Isabelle Hyman, Marcel Breuer, Architect: The Career and the Buildings; Christopher Wilk, Marcel Breuer: Furniture and Interiors; Robert F. Gatje, Marcel Breuer: A Memoir.]
Breuer's Offices/Partnerships Date Event 1928-1931 Marcel Breuer, Architekt, Berlin 1933-c. 1935 Marcel Breuer, Farkas Molnar and Joszef Fischer 1935-1937 Marcel Breuer and F.R.S. Yorke, Architects, London circa Oct 1937-Aug 1941 Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer, Architects, Cambridge Aug 1941-c. May 1946 Marcel Breuer, Architect, Cambridge circa May 1946-Sep 1948 Marcel Breuer, Architect, 438 East Eighty-Eighth Street, NY Sep 1948-Aug 1956 Marcel Breuer, Architect, 113 East Thirty-Seventh Street, NY Aug 1956-Jun 1965 Marcel Breuer and Associates, Architects, 201 East Fifty-Seventh Street, NY established Nov 1964 Marcel Breuer, Architecte, Paris Jun 1965-Mar 1978 Marcel Breuer and Associates, Architects, 635 Madison Avenue, NY established Mar 1978 Marcel Breuer Associates (MBA), 635 Madison Avenue, NY - Acquisition information:
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Bulk of collection, gift of Constance Breuer (1961-2004) and Thomas Breuer (2009-2010).
14 drawings of the Gropius House in Lincoln, MA, gift of Mary Daniels, 2012.
9 drawings of the Atlanta Public Library and one perspective drawing of a courtroom (possibly in North Carolina), gift of Rick Yestadt, Gordon + Yestadt Architects, 2012.
24 digital images of the Englund House, designed by Marcel Breuer and commissioned by John Englund's parents. gift of John Englund, 2012.
7 photographs of the Grand Coulee Dam Project; 2527 color slides of various Breuer project, gift of Robert Gatje, 2013.
23 blueprints and drawings of the McComb House, purchased, 2019.
Set of 4 Kacmarcik house drawings, gift of Christopher Monkhouse, 2021.
8 blueprints and assorted other Marshad House items, gift of Neal Marshad, 2022.
6 Breuer House II contract drawings, gift of Wendy Oberlander, 2023.
Ink and paint drawing of Talgo diesel engine, gift of Richard Glueck, 2023.
- Arrangement:
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The conceptual structure for arrangement of the collection follows the recommendations advanced in Waverly Lowell and Tawny Ryan Nelb's guide, Architectural Records: Managing Design and Construction Records (Society of American Archivists : Chicago, 2006). Project identification largely follows the listing in Isabelle Hyman, Marcel Breuer, Architect: The Career and the Buildings.
Personal papers, 1925-2001 (Biographical material, 1938-2001; Correspondence, 1935-1969; Financial records, 1934-1954; House papers, 1935-1952; Legal documents, 1925-1941; Photographs, 1928-1978). Professional papers, 1923-1992 (Associations and memberships, 1940-1960; Awards and honors, 1947-1973; Competitions, 1938-1948; Consulting, 1942-1947; Correspondence, 1935-1981; Exhibitions, 1938-1972; Interviews, 1962-1992; Juries and committees, 1944-1950; Publications, 1923-1983; Reference files, 1933-1981; Scrapbooks and clippings, 1923-1950; Slides (teaching and travel); Writings, 1923-1970). Faculty papers, 1939-1948 (Administrative, 1939-1948; Course Material, 1939-1941). Office records, 1931-1979 (Administrative records, 1931-1976; Correspondence, 1937-1979; Financial records, 1936-1951; Miscellaneous office material, 1930-c.1959; Prospects, 1938-1956; Travel, 1938-1970). Sketchbooks, circa 1939-1978 (Green sketchbook; Red sketchbooks; Miscellaneous non-project sketches). Furniture, 1921-1982 (Catalogs and promotional materials, 1920s-c.1980; Competitions and exhibitions, 1936-1982; Correspondence and business records, 1932-1977; Legal documents, 1934-1936; Patent documents, 1920-1938; Published material and writings, 1929-1981; Drawings, 1928-1970s; Photographs, 1921-1948). Project records, 1923-1984 (subseries for each project, with Drawings; Project files; Published material; Photographs, as applicable).
Because the files are arranged by project, an Alphabetical index of projects and name variants is provided at the end of this finding aid.
Boxes beginning with "SL-" contain glass lantern slides.
Indexed terms
- Subjects:
- Architects
Architects -- United States.
Architectural design.
Architectural drawing -- United States -- 20th century.
Architectural firms.
Architectural practice.
Architecture -- United States.
Architecture -- Designs and plans.
Architecture, American.
Architecture, Domestic.
Architecture, Industrial.
Architecture -- United States -- 20th century.
Bauhaus -- History.
Church architecture -- United States.
Furniture design -- United States.
Furniture designers.
Architects.
Architectural drawings (visual works)
Blueprints (reprographic copies)
Change orders.
Clippings (information artifacts)
Contracts.
Correspondence.
Detail drawings (drawings)
Exhibition catalogs.
Exterior perspectives.
Interior perspectives.
Lantern slides.
Manuscripts for publication.
Memorabilia.
Photographs.
Schematic drawings.
Sketches.
Slides (photographs)
Specifications.
Topographic surveys.
Writings (documents) - Names:
- Marcel Breuer and Associates.
Marcel Breuer Associates/Architects and Planners.
MBA (Marcel Breuer Associates)
Breuer, Marcel, 1902-1981.
Beckhard, Herbert.
Gatje, Robert F.
Gropius, Walter, 1883-1969.
Jossa, Mario.
Papachristou, Tician.
Smith, Hamilton P.
Yorke, F. R. S. (Francis Reginald Stevens) - Indexes:
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Index of projects and name variants
ABC-XYZ (tapestry) Tapestry Designs Abraham and Straus, Exterior Abraham and Straus, Exterior Acquitaine Resort Town (Amenagement de la Cote Aquitaine) Afghanistan project Hotels (Afghanistan) Airport Terminal Buildings Airport Terminal Buildings Alaska Air Terminal Airport Terminal Buildings Alcuin Library Saint John's Library Almy, Bigelow and Washburn Almy, Bigelow and Washburn Aluminum City Terrace Aluminum City Terrace Alworth House Starkey House (Alworth House) American Press Institute Conference Center American Press Institute Conference Center Ameritrust Tower (AT Tower) Cleveland Trust Company, Headquarters Anchorage Airport Airport Terminal Buildings Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict, Phase I Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict, Phase I Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict, Phase II Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict, Phase II Apartment for a Gymnastics Teacher Apartment for a Gymnastics Teacher Apartment Hotel Apartment Hotel Apartment House, New York Apartment House, New York Apartment House, Project for Bert Geller Apartment House, Project for Bert Geller Apartment of Our Time Bauausstellung Apartment-House Complex, Competition, Spandau-Haselhorst Apartment-House Complex, Competition, Spandau-Haselhorst API American Press Institute Conference Center Ariston Club Ariston Club Armstrong Rubber Company, Headquarters Armstrong Rubber Company, Headquarters Aspen House Paepcke Vacation House Auditorium (Bauhaus) Bauhaus Building Interiors (Dessau) Aufricht House, Addition Aufricht House, Addition Australian Embassy Australian Embassy B. Apartment Boroschek Apartment B.B. Chemical Company B.B. Chemical Company Balance (tapestry) Tapestry Designs Baldegg Convent Convent of the Sisters of Divine Providence Baltimore Garden Apartments Baltimore Garden Apartments BAMBOS Houses, Types 1, 2 and 3 BAMBOS Houses, Types 1, 2 and 3 Bamyan hotel Hotels (Afghanistan) Bandler House Bandler House Bantam ELEMENTARY School Bantam ELEMENTARY School Bauausstellung Bauausstellung Bauhaus Building Interiors (Dessau) Bauhaus Building Interiors (Dessau) Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) Bauhaus Weimar exhibition house Haus am Horn Beeckman Place 30 Beekman Place, 9th floor Begrisch Hall New York University Technology I Berger Apartment Berger Apartment Berlin Building Exhibition Bauausstellung Big Sur House Esalen Staff House ("Big Sur") Binuclear House Binuclear House Black Mountain College, Lake Eden Campus Black Mountain College, Lake Eden Campus Blue Eyes (tapestry) Tapestry Designs Boca Corporate Center and Campus IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III Boelcke interior Boelcke interior Bogota Master Plan Bogota Master Plan Boroschek Apartment Boroschek Apartment Boston and Maine Railroad, Locomotive and Passenger Cars Boston and Maine Railroad, Locomotive and Passenger Cars Boston Competition New England Merchants' Bank Building, Competition Boston Dispensary window display Boston Dispensary window display Brae Burn Country Club Country Club of Purchase Bratti House Bratti House Breuer Apartment Breuer Apartment Breuer Cottage Breuer Cottage Breuer Cottage, First Addition Breuer Cottage, First Addition Breuer Cottage, Second Addition Breuer Cottage, Second Addition Breuer Cottage, Studio Addition Breuer Cottage, First Addition Breuer House Breuer House I Breuer House I Breuer House I Breuer House II Breuer House II Breuer House III Breuer House III Breuer House, New Canaan I Breuer House II Breuer House, New Canaan II Breuer House III Breuer Monastic Wing Saint John's Monastery Wing Bristol Center (Harrison State Development Corporation) Office Building Bristol Center (Harrison State Development Corporation) Office Building Bristol Pavilion Gane's Pavilion Bronx Community College New York Univeristy Building Complex Brookhaven National Laboratory, Chemistry Building Brookhaven National Laboratory, Chemistry Building Bryn Mawr College Dormitory Bryn Mawr College Dormitory Bryn Mawr Lower School and elementary School (Bryn Mawr School for Girls of Baltimore City) Bryn Mawr Lower School and elementary School (Bryn Mawr School for Girls of Baltimore City) Budapest Spring Fair Spring Trade Fair, Competition Building Trades Exhibition Building Trades Exhibition Caesar Cottage Caesar Cottage California Arts and Architecture/Pepperell Manufacturing Company House, Competition California Arts and Architecture/Pepperell Manufacturing Company House, Competition Cambridge Memorial War Memorial (Cambridge Honor Roll) Campus High School Campus High School Canteen (Bauhaus) Bauhaus Building Interiors (Dessau) Cape Cod Cottages Breuer CottageKepes CottageStillman (Edgar, Jr.) CottageWise House Cardinal Stritch College, Tri-Art Center Cardinal Stritch College, Tri-Art Center CCI CCI Central Park Stables and Police Precinct House, Competition Central Park Stables and Police Precinct House, Competition Centre D'Etudes et Recherches IBM Research Center (La Gaude) Chamberlain Cottage Chamberlain Cottage Charles Center One Charles Center Charles R. DeCarlo Performing Arts Center Sarah Lawrence College, Art Center Chicagoland Prize Homes, Competition Chicagoland Prize Homes, Competition Church and Rectory of St. Francis de Sales Church and Rectory of St. Francis de Sales City University of New York, Lehman College, Fine Arts Building Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings Civic Center of the Future Garden City of the Future, Model Clark House Clark House Clarksburg Harrison Public Library Clarksburg Harrison Public Library Cleveland Museum of Art, Education Wing Cleveland Museum of Art, Education Wing Cleveland Trust Company, Headquarters Cleveland Trust Company, Headquarters Cleveland Trust Tower Cleveland Trust Company, Headquarters Collegeville Institute Saint John's Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research Colston Hall New York University Residence Hall Commercial Leaseholds Ltd. Commercial Leaseholds Ltd. Commission on Community Interrelations (CCI) of the American-Jewish Congress CCI Community Hall New York University Student Center Concrete Block Screen Concrete Block Screen Conjunto Recreacional en Tanaguarena Recreational Apartments Connecticut Junior College Connecticut Junior Republic Connecticut Junior Republic Connecticut Junior Republic Continuing Education Site, University of Minnesota, St. Paul Continuing Education Site, University of Minnesota, St. Paul Convent of the Sisters of Divine Providence Convent of the Sisters of Divine Providence Cork Exhibition Cork Exhibition Coston House Coston House Country Club of Purchase Country Club of Purchase De Bijenkorf Department Store Complex De Bijenkorf Department Store Complex De Bijenkorf Department Store Parking Garage De Bijenkorf Department Store Parking Garage De Francesco Apartment De Francesco Apartment De Gunzburg Chalets De Gunzburg Chalets Defendon Pharma Mundipharma, Headquarters and Manufacturing Plant Defense Housing Defense Housing Defense Housing, Pittsburgh Aluminum City Terrace De-mountable Housing Yankee Portables Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Headquarters Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Headquarters Deutscher Werkbund Exhibition Paris Werkbund Exhibition Die Wohnung Unserer Zeit Bauausstellung Doldertal Apartment Houses Doldertal Apartment Houses Dryberry Lake Island Project Halvorson Fishing Camp Duplex-Apartment Complex Duplex-Apartment Complex Duve Apartment Duve Apartment Dwelling (Wohnhaus) I and II Dwelling (Wohnhaus) I and II East Side Apartments Apartment House, New York Eastern Air Lines Ticket Office Eastern Air Lines Ticket Office El Recreo Urban Center El Recreo Urban Center Elberfeld Hospital Hospital for 1,100 Beds, Competition Englund House Englund House Esalen Staff House ("Big Sur") Esalen Staff House ("Big Sur") European Investment Bank European Investment Bank Exhibition house House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art Fairbanks Airport Airport Terminal Buildings Fairview Heights Apartments Fairview Heights Apartments Ferry-Sales Central Library Grosse Pointe Public Library Fine Arts Building, Lehman College Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings Fischer House and Studio Fischer House and Studio Fischer House I Fischer House and Studio Fischer House II Fischer House, Guest Cottage Fischer House, Guest Cottage Fischer House, Guest Cottage Flaine Flaine Florida Beach House Binuclear House Florida House Binuclear House Flowering of American Folk Art, Exhibition Flowering of American Folk Art, Exhibition Flusing Meadows Park Sports Complex FOB (Federal Office Building) Strom Thurmond Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse Foote House Foote House Ford House Ford House Frameless Glass Sliding Window Frameless Glass Sliding Window Frank House Frank House Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial Fuld Factory H. Fuld and Company Telephone Factory, Competition Furnas Hall (EandAS 2) State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex Gagarin House I Gagarin House I Gagarin House II Gagarin House II Gagarin Retreat House Esalen Staff House ("Big Sur") Gane House Gane House Gane's Pavilion Gane's Pavilion Garden City of the Future, Model Garden City of the Future, Model Geller House I Geller House I Geller House II Geller House II Geller Showroom Geller Showroom Gould Hall of Technology New York University Technology I Grand Central Tower 175 Park Avenue Grand Coulee Dam, Columbia Basin Project, Third Power Plant and Forebay Dam Grand Coulee Dam, Columbia Basin Project, Third Power Plant and Forebay Dam Grand Coulee Dam, Columbia Basin Project, Visitor Arrival Center Grand Coulee Dam, Columbia Basin Project, Visitor Arrival Center Greater Boston Community Fund exhibition Boston Dispensary window display Greenwich Village Public School 3 Greenwich Village Public School 3 Grieco House Grieco House Gropius House, Dessau Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) Gropius House, Lincoln Gropius House, Lincoln Grosse Pointe Public Library Grosse Pointe Public Library Grote House Grote House H. Fuld and Company Telephone Factory, Competition H. Fuld and Company Telephone Factory, Competition Hagerty House Hagerty House Halvorson Fishing Camp Halvorson Fishing Camp Halvorson Pool Halvorson Pool Hans Falkner Ski Lodge Hans Falkner Ski Lodge Hanson House Hanson House Harnischmacher Apartment Harnischmacher Apartment Harnischmacher House I Harnischmacher House I Harnischmacher House II Harnischmacher House II Harnischmacher Office Harnischmacher Office Harvard University, Biology and Chemistry Building Harvard University, Biology and Chemistry Building Harvard Yard Project Harvard Yard Project Haus am Horn Haus am Horn Haus M (Melder House) Haus M (Melder House) Heckscher Museum Expansion Heckscher Museum Expansion Heinersdorff House Heinersdorff House Herrick House Herrick House HEW Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) Heydt Apartment Heydt Apartment HHS Building Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) Hill Museum and Manuscript Library (HMML) Saint John's Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, Bush Center Hooper House I Hooper House I Hooper House II Hooper House II Hospital for 1,100 Beds, Competition Hospital for 1,100 Beds, Competition Hotel Y C.I.C. Hotel Y C.I.C. Hotels (Afghanistan) Hotels (Afghanistan) House at Clifton Gane House House for a Sportsman, Building Exhibition House for a Sportsman, Building Exhibition House in Maehrisch-Ostrau Haus M (Melder House) House in Pittsburgh Frank House House in the Berkshires Robinson House House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art Hubert H. Humphrey Building Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) HUD Headquarters Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Headquarters Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III IBM Boca Raton IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III IBM Complex, Blue Lake IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III IBM Forum La Gaude IBM Research Center (La Gaude) IBM Innovation Center IBM Research Center (La Gaude) IBM La Gaude IBM Research Center (La Gaude) IBM Research Center (La Gaude) IBM Research Center (La Gaude) Institute for Advanced Study, Library Institute for Advanced Study, Library Institute for Advanced Study, Members' Housing Institute for Advanced Study, Members' Housing Interama (State of Florida Inter-American Center Authority Terminal Building), Miami International Airport Interama (State of Florida Inter-American Center Authority Terminal Building), Miami International Airport International Competition for Low Cost Furniture Design International Competition for Low Cost Furniture Design Isokon Bar Isokon Bar Jack L. Honig Offices and Showroom Jack L. Honig Offices and Showroom Jarvis Hall (EandAS 1) State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex Jewish Hospital for 220 Beds, Competition Jewish Hospital for 220 Beds, Competition Journal House Postwar House for Ladies' Home Journal Kabul hotel Hotels (Afghanistan) Kacmarcik House Kacmarcik House Karsten House Karsten House Kaufmann Apartments Apartment House, New York Kent School, Girls' Chapel Kent School, Girls' Chapel Kepes Cottage Kepes Cottage Ketter Hall (EandAS 4) State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex Kharkov Theater Ukranian State Theater, Competition Kleinmetallhaus Small Metal House (Kleinmetallhaus), 1925-1926 Type Kniffin House Kniffin House Knoll Showroom (Brussels) Knoll Showroom (Brussels) Koerfer House Koerfer House Korkindustrie Austellung Cork Exhibition Kreizel House, Addition Kreizel House, Addition Krieger House Krieger House Laaff House Laaff House Lauck House Lauck House Lawton Community Plan Lawton Community Plan Lee-on-Solent house Rose House Lehman College, Fine Arts Building Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings Leiser Stores Leiser Stores Levi Apartment Apartment for a Gymnastics Teacher Levy House Levy House Levy House, Addition Levy House, Addition Levy Interior Levy Interior Lewin House Lewin House Litchfield High School Litchfield High School London Building Exhibition, 1936 Garden City of the Future, Model London Theater Studio London Theater Studio Long Beach Hospital, Nurses' Residence Long Beach Hospital, Nurses' Residence Maas House Maas House Madison Park High School Campus High School Madison Park Urban Renewal Madison Park Urban Renewal Marcel Breuer House at Pocantico House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art Marcel Breuer Tower Cleveland Trust Company, Headquarters Marlborough Gallery Marlborough Gallery Marshad House Marshad House Martine House Martine House Mary College University of Mary, Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict Masters' houses (Bauhaus) Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) McComb House McComb House McGinnis House McGinnis House McGinnis Penthouse Apartment (NSIBP) McGinnis Penthouse Apartment (NSIBP) McMullen Beach House McMullen Beach House Meiser Charette School Greenwich Village Public School 3 Meister Hall New York University Technology II Melder House Haus M (Melder House) Merck, Sharp and Dohme Merck, Sharp and Dohme Miami House Binuclear House Mills House Mills House Mills House, Addition Mills House, Addition Model Bathroom Model Bathroom Moholy-Nagy Apartment Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) Moholy-Nagy House Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) MoMA house House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art MoMA Intl.Competition for Low-Cost Furniture International Competition for Low Cost Furniture Design Motley's Fashion Studio Motley's Fashion Studio MSD Merck, Sharp and Dohme Muche House Bauhaus Masters' Houses Interiors (Dessau) Mundipharma, Headquarters and Manufacturing Plant Mundipharma, Headquarters and Manufacturing Plant Museum for the Nordrhein-Westfalen Collection, Competition Museum for the Nordrhein-Westfalen Collection, Competition Museum house House in the Museum Garden, Museum of Modern Art Nassau State School State School for the Mentally Retarded Near East Side Urban Development Project Bristol Center (Harrison State Development Corporation) Office Building Neumann House Neumann House Neumann House, Pool house Neumann House, Pool house New Campus High School Campus High School New England Merchants' Bank Building, Competition New England Merchants' Bank Building, Competition New Haven Railroad, Locomotives and Passenger Cars New Haven Railroad, Locomotives and Passenger Cars New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (New London, CT) New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (New London, CT) New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (Rye, NY) New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (Rye, NY) New Jersey Housing Project Duplex-Apartment Complex New Kensington Project Aluminum City Terrace New London Station New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (New London, CT) New York Apartment House Apartment House, New York New York University Building Complex New York University Building Complex New York University Residence Hall New York University Residence Hall New York University Student Center New York University Student Center New York University Technology I New York University Technology I New York University Technology II New York University Technology II New York World's Fair Exhibition Pennsylvania State Exhibition, World's Fair North Station Industrial Building (NSIBP) McGinnis Penthouse Apartment (NSIBP) Northfield Elementary School Northfield Elementary School Nurses' Residence Long Beach Hospital, Nurses' Residence O.E. McIntyre, Inc. O.E. McIntyre, Inc. Oglala Community High School (Pine Ridge High School) Oglala Community High School (Pine Ridge High School) Olgiata Parish Church (Chiesa parocchiale delle Sante Rufina e Seconda, Olgiata Romana) Olgiata Parish Church (Chiesa parocchiale delle Sante Rufina e Seconda, Olgiata Romana) One Charles Center One Charles Center Pack House Pack House Pack House Addition Pack House Addition Paepcke Vacation House Paepcke Vacation House Paris Exhibition, 1930 Paris Werkbund Exhibition Paris Werkbund Exhibition Paris Werkbund Exhibition Park Avenue Tower 175 Park Avenue Peabody Museum Peabody Museum Pencil Points/Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company House, Competition Pencil Points/Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company House, Competition Pennsylvania State Exhibition, World's Fair Pennsylvania State Exhibition, World's Fair Peter Engel Science Center Saint John's Science Building Philip Morris Manufacturing Facility Philip Morris Manufacturing Facility Picker House Picker House Pine Ridge High School Oglala Community High School (Pine Ridge High School) Pirelli Tire Building Armstrong Rubber Company, Headquarters Piscator Apartment Piscator Apartment Pittsburgh Glass House Pencil Points/Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company House, Competition Plas-2-Point House Plas-2-Point House Polowczyk Hall New York University Technology I Post-War House California Arts and Architecture/Pepperell Manufacturing Company House, Competition Postwar House for Ladies' Home Journal Postwar House for Ladies' Home Journal Potsdamer Platz Potsdamer Platz Potter House Potter House Princeton Institute Institute for Advanced Study, Members' Housing Princeton Library Institute for Advanced Study, Library Project for a Cathedral (St. Paul's) Project for a Cathedral (St. Paul's) Purchase Hills Country Club of Purchase Rand House Rand House Realistic House in Georgia: Competition Sponsored by Progressive Architecture/Rich's Department Store Realistic House in Georgia: Competition Sponsored by Progressive Architecture/Rich's Department Store Recreational Apartments Recreational Apartments Reidemeister Apartment Reidemeister Apartment Resort Town (Amenagement de la Cote Aquitaine) Resort Town (Amenagement de la Cote Aquitaine) Rhoads Hall Bryn Mawr College Dormitory Robeck House Breuer House II Robert C. Weaver Federal Building Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Headquarters Robinson (George) House Robinson (George) House Robinson Hall Harvard University, Biology and Chemistry Building Robinson House Robinson House Rockefeller (Winthrop) House, Addition Rockefeller (Winthrop) House, Addition Rockville Centre House Rockville Centre House Roof Coping Project Roof Coping Project Rose House Rose House Rosen House Rosen House Ross House Ross House Roxbury Campus High School Campus High School Royal Agricultural Show Gane's Pavilion Rye Station New Haven Railroad, Passenger Station (Rye, NY) S. Residence Binuclear House Sackler II Mundipharma, Headquarters and Manufacturing Plant Saier House Saier House Saint Bernard Hall Saint John's Residence Hall II Saint Boniface Hall Saint John's Residence Hall II Saint John's Abbey and University Complex Saint John's Abbey and University Complex Saint John's Campus Center (Student Union and Swimming Pavilion) Saint John's Campus Center (Student Union and Swimming Pavilion) Saint John's Church and Campanile Saint John's Church and Campanile Saint John's Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, Bush Center Saint John's Hill Monastic Manuscript Library, Bush Center Saint John's Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research Saint John's Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research Saint John's Library Saint John's Library Saint John's Monastery Wing Saint John's Monastery Wing Saint John's Residence Hall I Saint John's Residence Hall I Saint John's Residence Hall II Saint John's Residence Hall II Saint John's Science Building Saint John's Science Building Saint John's University Saint John's Abbey and University Complex Saint Patrick Hall Saint John's Residence Hall II Saint Thomas Aquinas Hall Saint John's Residence Hall I Sandor House Sandor House Sarah Lawrence College, Art Center Sarah Lawrence College, Art Center Sarget-Ambrine, Headquarters and Pharmaceutical Laboratories Sarget-Ambrine, Headquarters and Pharmaceutical Laboratories Sarget-Ambrine, Headquarters and Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Expansion (Sarget II) Sarget-Ambrine, Headquarters and Pharmaceutical Laboratories, Expansion (Sarget II) Scarlet (tapestry) Tapestry Designs Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 112 W. 9th Street, Los Angeles, CA Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 112 W. 9th Street, Los Angeles, CA Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 1411 Broadway, 29th floor, New York, NY Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 1411 Broadway, 29th floor, New York, NY Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 417 5th Avenue, 5th floor Scarves by Vera, Showroom, 417 5th Avenue, 5th floor Scarves by Vera, Warehouse Scarves by Vera, Warehouse Schmidt Apartment Schmidt Apartment Schmitt Cottage Schmitt Cottage Schneider House Schneider House Scott House Scott House Scott House, Addition Scott House, Addition SEC (Secondary Education Complex) Campus High School Seventy Square Meter Apartment Seventy Square Meter Apartment Shangri-La Rose House Shatsow House Coston House Shuster Hall Hunter College Library, Classroom and Administration Buildings Silver Hall New York University Residence Hall Singer Apartment Singer Apartment Sixty State Street Sixty State Street Sliding Window Sliding Window Small Metal House (Kleinmetallhaus), 1925-1926 Type Small Metal House (Kleinmetallhaus), 1925-1926 Type Smith College, Dormitories, Competition Smith College, Dormitories, Competition Smith House Smith House Snower House Snower House Sonnen-Turm Sun Tower Soriano House Soriano House South Boston Redevelopment Plan South Boston Redevelopment Plan South Portal Building Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) Southern New England Telephone Company, Traffic Service Position Systems Building Southern New England Telephone Company, Traffic Service Position Systems Building Space Sculpture Space Sculpture Spandau-Haselhorst Apartments Apartment-House Complex, Competition, Spandau-Haselhorst Sports Complex Sports Complex Spring Trade Fair, Competition Spring Trade Fair, Competition St. Francis de Sales Church Church and Rectory of St. Francis de Sales St. Paul's Cathedral, Competition Project for a Cathedral (St. Paul's) Staehelin House Staehelin House Starkey House (Alworth House) Starkey House (Alworth House) State School for the Mentally Retarded State School for the Mentally Retarded State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex Stillman (Edgar, Jr.) Cottage Stillman (Edgar, Jr.) Cottage Stillman House I Stillman House I Stillman House II Stillman House II Stillman House III Stillman House III Strobel Interior Strobel Interior Strom Thurmond Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse Strom Thurmond Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse Study for a 'binuclear house' California Arts and Architecture/Pepperell Manufacturing Company House, Competition Stuyvesant Six: A Redevelopment Proposal Stuyvesant Six: A Redevelopment Proposal Summer House Breuer Cottage Summer House Addition Breuer Cottage, First Addition Sun Tower Sun Tower SUNY Buffalo State University of New York at Buffalo, Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science Building Complex Sutton Place Apartment House, New York Tanaguarena Apartments Recreational Apartments Tandem Tennis Courts and Club Tandem Tennis Courts and Club Tapestry Designs Tapestry Designs Thompson House Thompson House Thost House Thost House Tibby House Tibby House Tile Council of America Bathroom Model Bathroom Tilley House Tilley House Tomkins House Tomkins House Torin Corporation (Nivelles) Torin Corporation (Nivelles) Torin Corporation (Oakville) Torin Corporation (Oakville) Torin Corporation (Penrith) Torin Corporation (Penrith) Torin Corporation (Rochester, Indiana) Torin Corporation (Rochester, Indiana) Torin Corporation (Swindon) Torin Corporation (Swindon) Torin Corporation (Van Nuys) Torin Corporation (Van Nuys) Torin Corporation, Administration Building Torin Corporation, Administration Building Torin Corporation, Assembly Plant (Lawton) Torin Corporation, Assembly Plant (Lawton) Torin Corporation, Franklin Drive Plant Torin Corporation, Franklin Drive Plant Torin Corporation, Machine Division Factory Torin Corporation, Machine Division Factory Torin Corporation, Technical Centers Torin Corporation, Technical Centers Torrington High School Torrington High School Torrington Manufacturing Co. Torin Corporation Torrington UKD Torin Corporation (Swindon) T-REX Corporate Center IBM Administrative, Laboratory and Manufacturing Facility, Phase I, II and III Two Dressers for Mr. and Mrs. H. Beckhard Two Dressers for Mr. and Mrs. H. Beckhard Ukranian State Theater, Competition Ukranian State Theater, Competition UNESCO, Headquarters (Place de Fontenoy) UNESCO, Headquarters (Place de Fontenoy) UNESCO, Headquarters (Porte Maillot) UNESCO, Headquarters (Porte Maillot) UNESCO, Headquarters, 4th Building UNESCO, Headquarters, 4th Building United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) headquarters building Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), Headquarters (Hubert H. Humphrey Federal Building) United States Embassy, The Hague United States Embassy, The Hague University of Mary, Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict University of Mary, Annunciation Priory of the Sisters of St. Benedict University of Massachusetts, Murray Lincoln Campus Center University of Massachusetts, Murray Lincoln Campus Center University of Virginia, Physics Building University of Virginia, Physics Building Ustinov House Ustinov House Van der Wal House Van der Wal House Van Leer Office Building Van Leer Office Building Vassar College, Ferry Cooperative Dormitory (Ferry House) Vassar College, Ferry Cooperative Dormitory (Ferry House) Ventris Apartment Ventris Apartment Vine Cottage Schmitt Cottage Visitor Arrival Center (VAC) Grand Coulee Dam, Columbia Basin Project, Visitor Arrival Center Von der Heydt Apartment Heydt Apartment Waldenmark Fischer House and Studio Wannsee Golf House Office Wannsee Golf House Office War Memorial (Cambridge Honor Roll) War Memorial (Cambridge Honor Roll) Wayland Cottage Chamberlain Cottage Weekend House, Types I and II Weekend House, Types I and II Weintraub Agency Weintraub Agency Weissenhof Housing Exhibition Weissenhof Housing Exhibition Weissenhofsiedlung Weissenhof Housing Exhibition Wellfleet Cottages Breuer CottageKepes CottageStillman (Edgar, Jr.) CottageWise House West Queens High School West Queens High School Westchester Reform Temple Westchester Reform Temple Wethersfield Project Defense Housing Wheaton College, Art Center, Competition Wheaton College, Art Center, Competition Whitby School Whitby School Whitney Museum of American Art Whitney Museum of American Art Wilensky Apartment Wilensky Apartment Winter Sports Hotel Hans Falkner Ski Lodge Wise House Wise House Wise House, Addition Wise House, Addition Witalis House Witalis House Wochenendhaus Weekend House, Types I and II Wohn Hotel Apartment Hotel Wohnbedarf Stores Wohnbedarf Stores Wohnhaus I and II Dwelling (Wohnhaus) I and II Wohnung eine gymnastik lehrerin Apartment for a Gymnastics Teacher Wolfson Trailer House Wolfson Trailer House Woods End colony Breuer House IGropius House (Lincoln)Ford House Yale University, Becton Engineering and Applied Science Center Yale University, Becton Engineering and Applied Science Center Yankee Portables Yankee Portables Young Master Houses BAMBOS Houses, Types 1, 2 and 3 Zagreb Hospital Jewish Hospital for 220 Beds, Competition ZUP de Bayonne ZUP de Bayonne 1200 Square Feet House Postwar House for Ladies' Home Journal 175 Park Avenue 175 Park Avenue 1939 World's Fair Exhibition Pennsylvania State Exhibition, World's Fair 30 Beekman Place, 9th floor 30 Beekman Place, 9th floor
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Marcel Breuer Papers,
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