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Encyclopedia > Thomas Dolliver Church

Thomas Dolliver Church (1902-1978), called "Dolliver" by his family and "Tommy" by his friends, was born in Boston but grew up in Oakland, California. Boston is a town and small port c. ... } Oakland, founded in 1852, is a major American city on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay in Northern California in the United States. ...


He received his undergraduate degree in landscape architecture at the University of California, Berkeley. He later received his master’s degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Church traveled to Italy and Spain for six months on a Sheldon Fellowship that he was awarded at Harvard. After returning from Europe he taught at Ohio State University for a year before returning to the San Francisco Bay area. In some educational systems, an undergraduate is a post-secondary student pursuing a Bachelors degree. ... Landscape architecture is the art, planning, design, management, preservation and rehabilitation of the land and the design of man-made constructs. ... The University of California, Berkeley (also known as the University of California at Berkeley, UC Berkeley, Cal, California, or Berkeley) is the oldest and flagship campus of the ten-campus University of California system. ... Harvard Graduate School of Design The Harvard Graduate School of Design is a graduate school at Harvard University offering degrees in Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning and Design. ... The Ohio State University is currently the third largest university in the United States and currently ranked by US News and World Report as the best public university in Ohio and the twenty-first best public university in the nation. ...


At the age of thirty, Church opened an office in San Francisco and continued to practice out of the same office until his retirement in 1977. This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ... For the album by Ash, see 1977 (album). ...


At the time that Church started practicing, the neoclassic movement was still the design style of choice. Thomas’s education at UC-Berkeley and Harvard, along with his travels to Europe, instilled in him a sense of the classical form. However, Church is known as one who opened the door to the Modern movement in landscape architecture with what came to be known as the “California Style.”


In his book Gardens Are For People, Church outlines four principles for his design process. They are: “Unity, which is the consideration of the schemes as a whole, both house and garden; function, which is the relation of the practical service areas to the needs of the household and the relation of the decorative areas to the desires and pleasures of those who use it; simplicity, upon which may rest both the economic and aesthetic success of the layout; and scale, which gives us a pleasant relation of parts to one another.”


It should be pointed out that while he used the Modern idea of freedom of elements, such as form, line, and movement, Thomas never abandoned the solid design principles of the past. One of the things that made his designs both unique and influential was the seamless marriage of two opposite design principles. Another design element that Church often used was the idea of the outdoor living space or dividing the landscape into separate “rooms.”


The majority of Church’s work was residential, in which he reportedly did over 2000 designs. His most noted residential work is the Donnell Gardens in Sonoma County, California. He also worked on a number of larger projects. He oversaw the master planning of UC-Berkeley, UC-Santa Cruz, Harvey Mudd College, and the Wascana Center in Regina, Saskatchewan. He designed the grounds of the American Embassy in Havana, Cuba, the General Motors Research Center in Detroit, the Des Moines Art Center, the hotel El Panama, Panama City, and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Thomas Church had a long and distinguished career as a Landscape Architect.


The modern residential landscape in California, and possibly the whole of the US, as we know it was birthed from a small group of designers, of which he was the founding father.


References

  • Gardens Are For People, Church, Thomas. San Francisco, California: McGraw Hill Book Co., 1983
  • Landscapes in History: Design and Planning in the Western Tradition, Pregill, Philip and Volkman, Nancy. New York, New York: Nosostrand and Reinhold, 1993 three

See also

  • http://www.gardenserve.com/thomaschurch.htm
  • http://filebox.vt.edu/users/emcgarry/
  • http://lakewold.org/tchurch.html
  • http://www.stanfordalumni.org/news/magazine/2003/janfeb/features/church.html

  Results from FactBites:
 
Stanford Magazine > January/February 2003 > Feature Story > He Changed the Landscape (2539 words)
Church’s Lomita has all but disappeared, relegated to the memory of pre-2000 alums, as the new Science and Engineering Quad is the focal point for the area west of the Main Quad.
Church’s reconfiguration of Lomita as a peripatetic’s paradise was part of a larger plan to turn the center of campus into a pedestrian zone, and that principle remains central to Stanford’s long-term strategy.
The result is quintessential Church, from the sweep of pathways to the functional areas of asphalt to the ring of built-in benches facing Aristides Demetrios’s sculpture with its 80 jets of water.
Thomas Dolliver Church at AllExperts (515 words)
Thomas Dolliver Church (1902-1978), called "Dolliver" by his family and "Tommy" by his friends, was born in Boston but grew up in Oakland, California.
Church traveled to Italy and Spain for six months on a Sheldon Fellowship that he was awarded at Harvard.
At the age of thirty, Church opened an office in San Francisco and continued to practice out of the same office until his retirement in 1977.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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