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Encyclopedia > George Wyman

George Herbert Wyman (1860 – ca. 1900) was an American architect, most noted for designing the Bradbury Building (304 South Broadway) in Los Angeles.


Wyman was born in Dayton and on leaving school was apprenticed in the architects office of his uncle, Luthor Peters. He moved to Los Angeles in 1891 where he worked as a draughtsman in the offices of Sumner Hunt.


In 1892 Hunt was approached by the mining millionaire Lewis Bradbury to construct a landmark building for a site in down town Los Angeles. Disappointed with Hunt's design, Bradbury took the surprising step of asking the young Wyman to design the building, despite the fact that Wyman had no formal qualifiations as an architect and hadn't previously designed a building. Quite why Bradbury did this is not clear, but it is possible that whilst visiting Hunt's offices, he met Wyman and was inspired by some sketches that Wyman had been working on.


Wyman had been toying with the design of a futuristic building described in Edward Bellamy's science fiction novel and social commentry, Looking Backward:From 2000-1887 (chapter 10)[1] (http://xroads.virginia.edu/~HYPER/BELLAMY/toc.html). In the utopian society of the year 2000 the hero is taken to visit a shopping store:

It was the first interior of a twentieth-century public building that I had ever beheld, and the spectacle naturally impressed me deeply. I was in a vast hall full of light, received not alone from the windows on all sides, but from the dome, the point of which was a hundred feet above. Beneath it, in the centre of the hall, a magnificent fountain played, cooling the atmosphere to a delicious freshness with its spray. The walls and ceiling were frescoed in mellow tints, calculated to soften without absorbing the light which flooded the interior. Around the fountain was a space occupied with chairs and sofas, on which many persons were seated conversing.

With the exception of the fountain, the description neatly fits the interior which Wyman achieved in the Bradbury building just six years after Bellamy's book was published.


According to a story told by Wyman's grandson, Wyman was troubled by the responsibility of taking on the commission. Both he and his wife Belle were spiritualists and the couple decided to consult the spirits for guidance. Using a planchette (a device similar to a ouija board, they traced out the message

Mark Wyman take the Bradbury building and you will be... Successful.

Mark Wyman was George's younger brother who had died aged 8. At first they had trouble reading the final word, as it was written upside down in relation to the rest of the message [2] (http://4forry.best.vwh.net/ouija.htm).


As a result, Wyman accepted the commission, and Bradbury was pleased with the drawings and plans for a five story building at the corner of Third Avenue and Broadway. The building was completed a year later in 1893 although costs spiralled from $175,000 to $500,000, largely as a result of Bradbury specifying the best quality materials for all aspects of the construction.


The Bradbury building was met with critical acclaim including a positive review in Arts and Architecture magazine. However it was Wyman's only major success. In the following years, Wyman received numerous commissions for new buildings. He decided to bolster his qualification with an architectural correspondence course, but this seems to have turned him away from using interior light as an architectural element. His office buildings took on a heavy solid style and most have subsequently been demolished, whilst the Bradbury building is still much celebrated.


Cultural influence

Fittingly, given its original inspiration from 19th century science fiction, the building is perhaps best known for its appearance in Ridley Scott's science fiction movie Blade Runner, where the decayed and delapidated interior was used at the location for the home of the toymaker and android designer Sebastien. The building has since been restored, and the exterior is completely different from the sets used in the film.


The Bradbury Building has also featured as a location in several other Hollywood films, including "Double Indemnity", "Marlowe", "D.O.A.", "Chinatown", "Wolf" and "Lethal Weapon 4" and TV shows like "City of Angels" and "The Outer Limits".


References

  • Biography at Artnet (http://www.artnet.com/library/09/0924/T092488.asp)
  • USC description of the Bradbury building (http://www.usc.edu/isd/archives/la/pubart/Downtown/Broadway/Bradbury/) including photographs.

External links

  • Photograph of the Bradbury Building (http://pdphoto.org/PictureDetail.php?mat=pdef&pg=8107)

  Results from FactBites:
 
George Wyman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (719 words)
Wyman was born in Dayton and on leaving school was apprenticed in the architects office of his uncle, Luthor Peters.
According to a story told by Wyman's grandson, the famous sci-fi figure Forrest J Ackerman, Wyman was troubled by the responsibility of taking on the commission.
As a result, Wyman accepted the commission, and Bradbury was pleased with the drawings and plans for a five story building at the corner of Third Avenue and Broadway.
Official Website of The George A. Wyman Centennial Run Project of 2003 (1173 words)
Wyman's journey was accomplished by pounding over the ties of the trans-continental railroad as there were no "real" roads (in the sense that we in the modern age think of roads- asphalt, concrete, or tar and gravel) to travel upon.
George A.Wyman's account was originally published in a series of articles and in his own words in "The Motorcycle"; a periodical of the time dedicated to motorcycling.
Born in 1877, in California, to parents George W. Wyman (a house painter) and Arvilda Wyman (maiden name Stickney), George A. was the second youngest of four children and the youngest male child of the Wyman family.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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