Charles M. Goodman FAIA (November 26, 1906 – October 29, 1992) was an American architect who made a name for his modern designs in suburban Washington, D.C., after World War II. While his work has a regional feel, he ignored the colonial revival look so popular in Virginia. Goodman was quoted in the 1968 survey book Architecture in Virginia as saying that he aimed to "get away from straight historical reproduction."

Charles Morton Goodman
FAIA
Born(1906-11-26)November 26, 1906
New York City, US
DiedOctober 29, 1992(1992-10-29) (aged 85)
Alexandria, Virginia, US
Resting placeIvy Hill Cemetery, Alexandria
Alma materChicago School of Architecture of the Armour Institute (1934)
OccupationArchitect
Years active1934–1986
Spouse(s)Charlotte Kathleen Dodge (m. 1934, d. 1979)
Dorothy Mae Sopchick (m. 1980, d. 2013)
Children1
AwardsAIA National Award of Merit
PracticeCharles M. Goodman Associates
BuildingsCharles M. Goodman House, Unitarian Universalist Church of Arlington, Hawthorne School
ProjectsAlcoa House, The Commons, Hickory Cluster, Hollin Hills, National Homes Corp., River Park, Rock Creek Palisades, United States Post Offices, the Unitarian Church of Arlington, Washington, D.C., Southwest Urban Renewal, Washington National Airport, Westgate and Westpark Research Parks

Goodman, who developed preliminary designs for Washington National Airport and served as main architect of the Hollin Hills neighborhood in Alexandria, Virginia, attended the Illinois Institute of Technology. He came to D.C. in 1934 to work as the designing architect in the Public Buildings Administration. He later served as head architect at the United States Treasury Department and the Air Transport Command. After World War II he worked closely with Robert C. Davenport designing and site planning most of the Hollin Hills, where his firm, Charles M. Goodman Associates, designed over 14 models of house.

During the 1950s and 1960s, Goodman designed prefabricated homes for the National Homes Corporation of Lafayette, Indiana. It is estimated more than 325,000 homes throughout the United States were built using his National Homes’ designs. Such as “The Ranger”, “The Main Line”, “The Custom Line”, and “The Cadet”.

Personal life

edit

Goodman was born as Charles Morton Goldman in New York City. Historian Elizabeth Jo Lampl identifies his parents as "Polish immigrants Harris Goldman and Jennie Blomsten," and notes that "Goodman's transcript from the Armour Institute of Technology records that he entered that program as Charles M. Goldman, but changed his name in 1934 to Charles M. Goodman."[1]

He attended the University of Illinois from 1925 to 1928. At the Armour Institute, he was awarded the Dankmar Adler Prize as an outstanding freshman, and the Hutchinson medal as the leading senior in architecture, and a fellowship at Lake Forest foundation.[2] (The Lake Forest Foundation award listed him as "Charles M. Goldman.")[3] He graduated in 1934 from Amour Institute’s School of Architecture.

In June 1934, he married Charlotte Kathleen Dodge and they had one daughter together. After her passing and 45 years of marriage in 1979, he then married Dorothy Mae Sopchick on October 30, 1980, in Alexandria, Virginia.

Projects

edit

Residential structures

edit

Beyond his most known works at Hollin Hills and National Airport, his other notable projects included the 1964 Unitarian Church in Arlington, Virginia, at 4444 Arlington Blvd. His residence, Goodman House, was built in 1954 at 514 Quaker Lane in Alexandria. In Reston, he designed a "cluster" of townhouses in the woods above Lake Anne known as Hickory Cluster.

His 1949-51 development at Silver Spring, Maryland, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 2004 as the Hammond Wood Historic District. His 1951 development at Takoma Park, Maryland, was listed on the NRHP in 2004 as the Takoma Avenue Historic District. His 1958–1961 development at Silver Spring, Maryland, was listed on NRHP, and is known as the Rock Creek Woods Historic District.[4] He also designed 21 twin dwellings in the High Point section of the Virginia Heights Historic District.[5]

In 1957, Alcoa approached Goodman to design and build 50 Alcoa Care-free Homes; one in each state. Due to project difficulties, only 24 were built in 16 states including NRHP-designated properties of Alcoa Care-free Home (Brighton, New York)[6] and one within Hollin Hills Historic District.

In 1962, Reynolds Aluminum approached the noted architect to develop River Park townhomes along the Southwest Waterfront community of Washington, D.C., and just north of Fort McNair between N and O Streets and Delaware Avenue and 4th Street, SW. Goodman designed the glass and aluminum clad River Park Mutual Homes, which consists of two conjoined high-rise buildings and several clusters of flat and barrel-roof top townhouses.

In the mid-1960s, Goodman created one of his largest projects, the Houston House Apartments, a 31-story apartment complex in downtown Houston, Texas.

Locations receiving National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) designation and time of significance include:

Post offices and federal buildings

edit

Upon graduation, Goodman worked as an architect within the Public Buildings Administration (the precursor to today's Public Buildings Service of the U.S. General Services Administration, often with Louis A. Simon and Howard Lovewell Cheney, designing federal buildings, including:[8]

  • F. Edward Hébert Federal Building: New Orleans, Louisiana[9]
  • Federal Building at the 1939 New York World's Fair
  • U.S. Post Office: Chicago, Illinois:
    • Englewood Station
    • Logan Square
    • Roseland Station
    • Uptown Postal Station
  • U.S. Post Office: Covington, Kentucky: Post Office and Court House
  • U.S. Post Office: Detroit, Michigan:
    • Highland Park Branch
    • New Fairview Station
  • U.S. Post Office: Evanston, Illinois
  • U.S. Post Office: Flushing, New York: Forest Hills Station
  • U.S. Post Office: Granville, Ohio
  • U.S. Post Office: Kansas City, Kansas
  • U.S. Post Office: Saint Joseph, Michigan

Awards and honors

edit

Beyond the numerous awards and recognition of his residential neighborhoods reaching National Register of Historic Places status, Goodman has been recognized as one of the most significant architects of the 20th century.

In 1951, he was awarded Architect of the Year from the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) for Hollin Hills, one of many awards the community and his home designs would garner over the years. In 1959, he was made a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (FAIA). One year later, Goodman was awarded the 1960 Gold Medal from the Art Directors Club of Washington.

Goodman was one of eight architects honored as ‘’The People’s Architect’’ by Rice University to commemorate its semi-centennial, 1912–1962. Other awardees include: John Lyon Reid, O'Neil Ford, Victor Gruen, I. M. Pei, Vernon DeMars, Pietro Belluschi, and Marshall Shaffer.[10]

In July–August 1982, the AIA Virginia Society's "Outstanding Recognition Award" went to Charles M. Goodman, FAIA. He was cited for the consistent excellence and enduring quality of his design work. Of special note was Goodman's design for Hollin Hills, 450 contemporary single-family homes set in a wooded environment south of Alexandria. Begun in 1946, Hollin Hills received the inaugural award of the Virginia Society, AlA's Test-of Time Award the previous year in 1981. Other Goodman buildings lauded at the presentation were Reston's Hickory Cluster Town Houses, the Unitarian Church of Arlington and numerous buildings in the Westgate Research Park, near Tysons Corner, for which he provided the original land planning.[11]

In 1986, he received the Professional Achievement Award of the IIT Alumni Association.

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Lampl, Elizabeth Jo (2010). "Charles M. Goodman and 'Tomorrow's Vernacular". In Longstreth, Richard (ed.). Housing Washington: Two Centuries of Residential Development and Planning in the National Capital Area. Center for American Places. pp. 229–253. ISBN 978-1935195078.
  2. ^ "Home Designer World Famous: Goodman Is Architect Of All 1954 National Homes; Honored By Profession". Journal & Courier (Lafayette, Indiana). September 10, 1954. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
  3. ^ La Beaume, Louis (October 1931). "The Lake Forest Foundation Awards". Octagon. 3: 10–11.
  4. ^ "Hammond Wood Historic District". Maryland Historical Trust. Retrieved October 29, 2008.
  5. ^ Laura V. Trieschmann; Patti Kuhn; Elizabeth Breiseth; Ellen Jenkins; Saleh Van Erem; Jeanne Barnes (May 2007). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Virginia Heights Historic District" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 26, 2012. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  6. ^ Robert T. Englert (January 2010). "National Register of Historic Places Registration: Alcoa Care-free Home". New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  7. ^ "Reston, A Planned Community in Fairfax County, Virginia" (PDF). Hanbury Preservation Consulting, and William & Mary Center for Archaeological Research. Retrieved February 27, 2013.
  8. ^ "Charles M. Goodman architectural archive". Library of Congress. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  9. ^ "F. Edward Hebert Federal Building, New Orleans, La". U.S. General Services Administration. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  10. ^ "ARCHITECTVRE at Rice University Series, No. 7, March 1963" (PDF). Rice University School of Architecture. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
  11. ^ "Northern Virginia Architects Recognized by Professional Group (AIA Northern Virginia Chapter)" (PDF). Virginia Record: Journal of the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects. July–August 1982. Retrieved March 6, 2023.

Bibliography

edit
  • Goodman, Charles M. And Von Eckardt, Wolf; Life for dead spaces: the development of the Lavanburg Commons: An architectural proposal by Charles Goodman, and text by Wolf Von Eckardt. 1st ed. Published for the Fred L. Lavanburg Foundation by Harcourt, Brace & World New York 1963 [1963].
edit
  NODES
admin 4
Association 1
COMMUNITY 3
Note 4
Project 6