In 1983, Willis designed the first dedicated ballet building in the United States, the San Francisco Ballet Building (1984). This design influenced designs of many ballet buildings that would follow. Her designs for the
renovation of Glide Church and her prototypical design for Manhattan Village Academy Charter School within an existing building, created new way of thinking about building types. For these and the other significant projects in her design portfolio, Willis has received many honors, awards, and citations.
“Her humanistic designs combine an artist’s appreciation of light, color, and texture, and a designer’s understanding of form and proportion that serve to enhance the experience of space and to communicate directly to the senses,” according to Cynthia Phifer Kracauer, AIA, executive director of Beverly Willis Architectural Foundation.
About the Ballet Building, the Honorable Dianne Feinstein, U.S. Senator, said, “As mayor of San Francisco at the time, I was proud to work with architect, Beverly Willis, in creating this timeless monument to the arts.”
In 1995 Willis created the Architecture Research Institute as a think-tank to develop and advocate urban policies through interdisciplinary partnerships between academics, governments, corporations and the public. The institute sought to “promote research in design and planning that informs public policies and strategies that create livable, compact, global cities that are eco-sustainable, walk-able and less automobile dependent.” The Architecture Research Institute developed and advocated urban policies to make global cities more livable. After the attacks on the World Trade Center on 9/11, the institute co-founded Rebuild Downtown Our Town (R.Dot) with Susan Szenasy, editor Metropolis Magazine. R.Dot mobilized hundreds of designers, professionals, and civilians to create a coordinated response to help guide the rebuilding effort and establish a planning framework for the city of New York.
Laurels
In 2014, Beverly Willis was asked by the AIA to receive the institute’s Gold Medal, bestowed posthumously that year to Julia Morgan, making her the first woman to receive that honor. Willis accepted the medal on behalf of Julia Morgan and “all women architects.” Major awards and honors earned by Beverly Willis throughout her lifetime have included the 2018 AIA New York Visionary Award, sponsored by the Center for Architecture in New York City, as well as a California Council of the AIA Lifetime Achievement Award in 2017 (given by the largest U.S. contingent of architects). Others include the 2015 New York Construction Award for public service, sponsored by the New York Building Congress, the American Council of Engineering Companies, and the American Institute of Architects New York Chapter, (AIA-NY), awarded to the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation. Other distinctions include:
- Honorary naming of the Beverly Willis Library at the National Building Museum, Washington, D.C.
- 2015 American Institute of Architects New York Chapter (AIA-NY) Special Citation, awarded to Beverly Willis
- Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Association of Professional Women in Construction, 2011
- Top Women in Real Estate Award, New York Resident Magazine, 2010
- American Planning Association’s New York Metro Chapter’s Lawrence Orton Award for Excellence in City and Regional Planning cited Rebuild Downtown Our Town, co-directed by Beverly Willis, 2003
- Montgomery Fellowship, Dartmouth College, 1992
- National Association of Home Builders, Merit Award, River Run Residence, St. Helena, California, 1985
- California Council of the American Institute of Architects Merit Award, Margaret S. Hayward Playground Building, San Francisco, 1984
- Gold Nugget Grand Award, Pacific Coast Builders Conference and Builders Magazine, for Best Recreational Facility, Margaret S. Hayward Playground Building, San Francisco, 1983
- Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts, Mount Holyoke College, 1981
- Fellowship, in the American Institute of Architects, 1980
- American Institute of Architects (AIA) Award of Merit, 1976 Homes for Better Living Awards Program, Vine Terrace Apartments, San Francisco, 1976
- U. S. Government Delegate to “Habitat I” the 1976 United Nations Conference on Human Settlements, 1976
- Phoebe Hearst Gold Medal Award for Distinguished Service to San Francisco, 1969
- Award for Exceptional Distinction for Environmental Design for work on Union Street by the Governor of California, 1967
- AIA Bay Area Award for Union Street Store Development at 1980 Union Street, 1967
- Significant Achievement in Beautification Citation by Buildings Magazine for the Transamerica Title Building in Oakland, Calif., 1966
- Merit Award in Office Renovation for the Campbell-Ewald Building, San Francisco, by the American Institute of Building Design, 1965
Beverly Willis also led the creation of several films related to her work and to architecture and the roles of women in architecture. She wrote and directed “100 Women Architects in the Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright – ‘A Girl is a Fellow Here’” (2009), produced by the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation, as well as the 17-minute documentary film “Unknown New York: The City that Women Built” (2018), which highlights the many female architects, engineers, and builders behind 234 projects in Manhattan.
With the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation, Willis also produced “Built for Ballet – An American Original” (2011), “The Artist Beverly Willis – Honolulu and San Francisco, Years 1948–1968” (2013), and “The Architect Beverly Willis – San Francisco and New York Years 1958–1995” (2013), the latter in collaboration with the Beverly Willis Archive.
Professional Information
Willis’s last location of office was Beverly Willis Architect, 6 Rockland Park, Branford, Conn.
Innovations in practice by Beverly Willis and her firm have included her revolutionary reinvention of Glide Church in 1972, with its semicircular stage, high-tech two-way communication system, and a lighting system that would change the colors in the room. The successful
renovation influenced congregations nationwide. Willis also designed a prototype for the new concept of charter schools for the Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education in 1996. Different from a typical public school, Manhattan Village Academy debuted the new educational facility concept which was a model for other schools regionally.
Thirteen of Willis’s most significant projects are housed at the
Library of Congress. Her archive of architecture drawings is located at Virginia Tech Libraries. A collection of her art and painting is housed by the University of Hawaii Museum.
Personal Information
Beverly Willis is known to family and friends as Bev. She married Wanda Bubriski in 2008. Willis is survived by her spouse.
Willis was born in the heart of the Great Depression in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 1928 to a nurse, Margaret Elizabeth Porter, and an oil man named Ralph William Willis who was also proprietor of Willis Tool Company. They divorced when Willis was six years old, and Willis was placed in an orphanage. She left and later played semi-pro softball. Her brother, Ralph Gerald Willis and a half-sister from her father’s first marriage are also deceased. Her spouse Wanda Bubriski survives her.
Willis attended Classen High School in Oklahoma City, and later Franklin High School in Portland, Ore. In 1945 she enrolled at the University of Southern California, one of 200 women. Later she enrolled at Oregon State University in aeronautical engineering. She graduated from University of Hawaii with a Bachelor degree in Art in 1955. She was awarded an Honorary Doctorate degree by Mt Holyoke College in 1981.
Arrangements and Contributions
Information on services will follow. In lieu of flowers or gifts, please direct donations to BEVERLY WILLIS ARCHITECTURE FOUNDATION, 141 W. Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10013 USA.
Feature Image Source: Photograph by Wanda Bubriski