Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates
Practice information
Firm typeArchitecture
FoundersIgor B. Polevitzky
Verner Johnson
Founded1951 (1951) in Miami, Florida
Significant works and honors
Buildings
  • Hotel Habana Riviera
  • Golden Gate Hotel and Motel
DesignMiami Central High School[1]

Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates was a architectural firm with headquarters in Miami, Florida.

History[edit]

Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates, Inc. was established in 1951 in Miami, Florida. After coming back from World War II in the mid-1940s, Igor B. Polevitzky opened a new office in the Brickell neighbourhood and partnered with Verner Johnson.

Illustrator J. M. Smith, Jerome L. Schilling, Samuel S. Block, and William H. Arthur were among the firm's longtime associates. Photographers like Earl Struck, Jim Forney, Rudi Rada, Ernest Graham, Samuel H. Gottscho, and Robert R. Blanch were among those who worked as photographers frequently.[2]

In 1957, Meyer Lanksy commissioned the firm's senior partner Igor Polevitzky to design the Hotel Habana Riviera. Along with Verner Johnson and Associates, Polevitzky collaborated with Miguel Gastón and Manuel Carrerá, two architects from Cuba.[3] Built in the Vedado neighborhood of Havana, Cuba, the sixteen-story skyscraper was constructed on the Malecón beachfront boulevard.[4]

The Miami-based architectural firm was brought in to redesign the original Biltmore Yacht and Country Club after the winter of 1957, but the Cuban Revolution stopped it from ever being built.[5]

The founders of Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates disbanded in the mid-1960s. Around 1967, Igor Poletvitzky relocated permanently from his Miami home to Estes Park, Colorado.[6] The firm took on projects until the early 1970s.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Triple Threat Concrete Man - Newspapers.com™". newspapers.com. Retrieved 20 May 2024.
  2. ^ Historical Museum of Southern Florida, Polevitzky, "Selected records from the 'Polevitzky' Archive", Boxes 1-9. 1986-222-775.
  3. ^ Deupi, V., Lejeune, J. (2021). Cuban Modernism: Mid-Century Architecture 1940–1970. Germany: Walter de Gruyter GmbH.
  4. ^ Rodríguez, E. L. (2000). The Havana guide : modern architecture 1925-1965 (1st ed). Princeton Architectural Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=J-ZcAAAAMAAJ
  5. ^ Moruzzi, P. (2008). Havana before Castro: when Cuba was a tropical playground. Salt Lake City, Utah, Gibbs Smith.
  6. ^ "Igor B. Polevitzky photographs - circa 1934-1965". historymiamiarchives.org. Retrieved 20 May 2024.