Contributors: Nicholas Batson Eric Becker Peter Foti Andrew Koudlai Jesse Pringle Gabrielle Printz Kurt Stavdal Dirk Tempelman
curated and edited by: Gabrielle Printz faculty advisor: kenneth mackay
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contributor: eric becker 
contributor: Andrew Koudlai
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contributor: Peter Foti
contributor: Kurt Stavdal
West Elevation
West Elevation
contributor: Jesse Pringle 
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contributor: Dirk Tempelman 
Larz Anderson Auto Museum, Boston,
Kelp House, 1882-1883
Zinzendorf Hotel, Winston-Salem, 1891
Head Hall, South Boston, 1894
Jordan Hall, 1903
Horticulture Hall, Boston, 1901
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contributor: Gabrielle Printz
BRUCE PRICE (1845-1903) Bruce Price was born in Cumberland, Maryland. Before making his way to New York in 1877, he practiced in baltimore with E. Francis Baldwin, and briefly in Wilksbarre, where he opened his own firm after a period of study in Europe. He gained much acclaim in New York, particularly due to his early work in the exurban residential project he undertook with Tobacco magnate Pierre Lorilliard, Tuxedo Park, the height of his "exuberant" contribution to the Shingle Style. A new "darling" of the New York scene, he was awarded commissions for large-scale urban projects in New York, including The American Surety Company Building and the International Bank. His projects seemed to grow in both prestige and scale in his later career, where the spatial and formal innovations of his Shingle Style work gave way to Neo-Georgian excess.
early works
shingle style work
later works
Practicing in Baltimore and Wilkesbarre early in his career, Price took up in these works a simplified richardsonian vocabulary, borrowing from the stillpopular gothic revival. His Chase Street building in Baltimore demonstrates his use of masonry, an application developed through his career.
Price's work during the Shingle Style Period was encapsulated in an ex-urban planning project with tobacco magnate Pierre Lorrillard in Tuxedo Park, Ney York. There, Price designed thirteen shingle style homes, including the three below, as well as the community's clubhouse and stone entrance gate. The houses all demonstrate a neo-palladian interest in the roof (the almost platonic form of the gable), rear-facing assymmetries, and a floating roof mass, expressed by inset terraces. Scully alligns his work during this time with what will be seen in the early work of Frank Lloyd Right, both in respect to roof form and the opening of the interior in plan.
In New York, Price produced urban, large scale works including banks, educational buildings and railstations. his domestic projects reflected this change in scale, from the small country cottage to the chateau, with commissions like Montreal's Grand Hotel Frontenac and George Gould's neoGeorgian mansion
fig 1: 12-16 East Chase Street, Baltimore, 1870
fig 2: William Kent Cotttage, 1885
fig 3: Pierre Lorillard Residence, 1885
fig 5: Hotel Frontenac, Montreal, 1893
fig 4: W. Chandler House, 1885-6
fig 6: georgian court, new jersey, 1896
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contributor: Nicholas Batson 