Richard_Kiehnel

Kiehnel and Elliott

Kiehnel and Elliott

American architect


The architectural firm of Kiehnel and Elliott was established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1906. The firm did substantial work in Florida, and moved to Miami in 1922.[1] From 1926, it was known as Kiehnel, Elliott and Chalfant.[2]

Coral Gables Congregational Church
Annie Russell Theatre
Building at 361 Northeast 97th Street, Miami Shores

Richard Kiehnel (1870–1944) was the firm's senior partner. He was born in Germany and studied at the University of Breslau and the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris.[3] Kiehnel's first commission in the Miami area was in 1917 and he opened the firm's Miami office in 1922.[4] He supervised the construction of El Jardin, the earliest known Mediterranean Revival work remaining in Miami. Designing the mansion for John Bindley, President of the Pittsburgh Steel Company, Kiehnel departed from the Mission style that had only recently made its appearance in Florida and provided an elaborate antiquity for the house by using aging techniques to get the desired effect.[5][6] Kiehnel introduced Mediterranean Revival to Pinellas County through his designs of the Rolyat Hotel in Gulfport, Florida (now part of Stetson College of Law) and the Snell Arcade in St. Petersburg, Florida.

Kiehnel advanced to Art Moderne styling in the Carlyle Hotel on Miami Beach and the 1924 Scottish Rite Masonic Temple on the Miami River, the first Art Deco building in the area.[7] He also designed the Annie Russell Theatre, a Romanesque Revival building on the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park.

Kiehnel was active in his profession. He was a member of the Pittsburgh chapter of the American Institute of Architects since 1906 and a member of the national body from 1913. He was a charter member of the Florida South chapter and its president in 1930-1931[8] From 1935 to 1942 Kiehnel was the editor of Florida Architecture and Allied Arts magazine.

A number of Kiehnel's and the firm's works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.[9][10]

Notable buildings

By year (with attribution indicated in parentheses):

And (not by year):

See also

Category:Kiehnel and Elliott buildings


References

Notes
  1. "Kiehnel & Elliott: A Brief Survey of the Firm's Miami Projects". Learning from Miami. Archived from the original on February 28, 2018. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  2. "Kiehnel and Elliott". Allegheny West. Retrieved February 27, 2018.
  3. "German-born and educated Richard Kiehnel (1877-1944) and his partner John Blair Elliott (b. 1868) were commissioned to design the school."
  4. Kiehnel 1938
  5. Rodriguez 1982. p. 89
  6. Patricios 1994. p. 177
  7. Patricios 1994. p. 176
  8. Kiehnel 1938.
  9. Aurand, Martin (1994). The Progressive Architecture of Frederick G. Scheibler Jr. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. p 152. 184 pp., 125 black-and-white photographs. ISBN 0-8229-3781-6.
  10. Builders Bulletin 2:7 (October 13, 1917), 4.
  11. Patricios 1994. p. 151
  12. Dunlop 1996. p. 40.
  13. Patricios 1994. p. 148
  14. Miami Herald, July 6, 2008
  15. Patricios 1994. p. 165
  16. Dunlop 1996. p. 92.
  17. Patricios 1994. p. 198
  18. Patricios 1994. p. 191
  19. Rodriguez 1982. p. 208
  20. Dunlop 1996. p. 30.
  21. Rodriguez 1982. p. 155
  22. Patricios 1994. p. 171
  23. Patricios 1994. p. 206
  24. City of Miami
  25. Historical Museum
Bibliography
  • Dunlop, Beth. Miami: trends and traditions. New York: Monacelli Press, 1996. ISBN 1-885254-37-7
  • Kiehnel, Richard and Elliott, John M. A Monograph of the Florida Work of Kiehnel and Elliott. Miami, FL: Miami Post Publishing Company, 1938.
  • Patricios, Nicholas N. Building Marvelous Miami. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 1994. ISBN 0-8130-1299-6.
  • Rodriguez, Ivan A., editor. From Wilderness to Metropolis; the History and Architecture of Dade County (1825–1940). Miami, FL: Metropolitan Dade County, 1982. ISBN 0-916224-88-0.
  • Historical Museum of Southern Florida. "A Guide to Kiehnel and Elliott Architectural Drawings". Archived from the original on 23 April 2011. Retrieved 21 January 2011.
  • City of Miami. "Bryan Memorial Methodist Church" (PDF). Retrieved 6 April 2011.

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