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Ralph Anderson (architect) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ralph Anderson (architect)

Ralph D. Anderson (October 21, 1924〔(Anderson, Ralph D. ), Docomomo WEWA (Documentation and Conservation of the Modern Movement, Western Washington). Accessed online 30 October 2008.〕 – October 24, 2010) was an architect, based in Seattle, Washington, USA.〔Dean Stahl, (Taking the Long View ), ''Seattle Times Pacific Northwest Magazine'', July 29, 2007. Accessed online 29 October 2008.〕 He was a founder of Ralph Anderson and Partners, later Anderson Koch Smith. Although much of his work is modernist,〔〔.〕 he is also strongly associated with preservationism.〔〔.〕 In that latter respect, he was an early and important contributor (including as an investor) in the restoration of Seattle's Pioneer Square neighborhood〔 and also participated in restoration projects along First Avenue in the Pike Place Market Historical District in the 1970s.〔
==Early career==

Anderson graduated from the University of Washington Architecture School in his native Seattle in 1951〔〔〔(Ralph Anderson ), Seattle Homes and Lifestyles. Accessed online 29 October 2008.〕 and received his Washington State architectural license in 1954. He worked several years for architect Paul H. Kirk before opening his own practice.〔 His early work, including his own first home at Hidden Lake, constituted what he later called his "modernist glass-box phase". Having discovered how difficult it was to heat such a house he moved on to what he called a "Northwest design style. "I tried to use a lot of wood, and I tried to work with the contours, textures and vegetation of the Northwest, the wooded environment. Quite often I would have big, hovering roofs that would open up to the view."〔 The style was also characterized by "broad windows", "exposed framing", "an emphasis on verticality" and often "a formal T-shape plan." Many of these houses were set to take advantage of views of water or mountains.〔 He styled himself "the poor man's Roland Terry."〔
After about a decade of building houses mainly in Seattle's eastside suburbs Mercer Island and Bellevue, Anderson opened an office at 108 S. Jackson in Pioneer Square, then known as Skid Road. It was a derelict neighborhood, and there was little concern for the mostly turn-of-the century buildings: people bought and sold land considering the old buildings relatively incidental. Along with Richard White, later of Foster/White Gallery, Anderson was among the first to see the possibilities of the neighborhood. He mortgaged his house to buy the Union Trust Building from Sam Israel and moved his office there. It may be the only building Israel ever sold. His renovation of the Union Trust Building and later of the Grand Central Hotel buildings contributed flagship buildings to what is once again a vibrant district.〔〔

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