Joseph Allen Stein

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Joseph Allen Stein in 1986

Joseph Stein, (April 10, 1912 – October 6, 2001) was an American architect and a major figure in the establishment of a regional modern architecture in the San Francisco Bay area in the 1940s and 1950s during the early days of the environmental design movement. In 1952 he moved to India. He is noted for designing several important buildings in India, most notably in Lodhi Estate in Central Delhi, nicknamed "Steinabad" after him, and where today the 'Joseph Stein Lane', is the only road in Delhi named after an architect.[1][2] The Government of India awarded him the fourth highest civilian award of Padma Shri in 1992.[3]

Biography

Joseph Allen Stein was born on April 10, 1912, in Omaha, Nebraska. He studied architecture at the University of Illinois, the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris and the Cranbrook Academy of Art.[4] He worked for Eli Jacques Kahn in New York and with Richard Neutra in Los Angeles, before establishing his own practice in San Francisco. In San Francisco, he designed modest homes in the California style, but also became increasingly interested in the issues of low cost housing. He was also an active member of the group known as Telesis, which sought to bring better design to the needs of the middle and working classes.

With the outbreak of the Korean war and the rise of McCarthyism in 1950, he felt the need to find a location where his talent as an architect could be more freely expressed, and so left the US, first to Mexico and then to Europe, and finally to teach at Bengal Engineering College (now Indian Institute of Engineering Science and Technology, Shibpur) outside Calcutta.

Triveni Kala Sangam and Shridharani Art Gallery facade on the left, New Delhi, 1963.

In 1952 he moved to India, and became head of the department of architecture at the Bengal Engineering College in Calcutta. He worked in New Delhi from 1955 onwards, starting with another American architect, Benjamin Polk[5] and even after retirement in 1995, continued to design for the architecture firm he founded. Over the year, he brought in ‘California modernism’ to several buildings he designed in Delhi, including, the Ford Foundation headquarters and the India International Centre (IIC) (1962), United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef), the World Wide Fund for Nature, a conservatory within Lodhi Gardens, Gandhi-King Plaza, an open-air memorial in IIC, Triveni Kala Sangam at Mandi House, the American Embassy School and the Australian high commission in Chanakyapuri. Among his notable buildings outside Delhi was the Express Towers, the first high rise built in India, and at the time it was completed, the tallest building in South East Asia.

Several of his disciples went on to establish leading architectural firms and real estate development businesses; J. K. Jain (architect & real estate developer), Chairman at Dasnac Designarch; and Anuraag Chowfla and Meena Mani (architects), Principals at Mani & Chowfla, to name a few.[1]

In 1993, Building in the Garden, a study of his work, by Stephen White, dean of the School of Architecture at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island was published. He was awarded the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honor, in 1992. He married Margaret Suydam in 1938. He died on October 6, 2001, at age 89 in Raleigh, North Carolina.[6] He is survived by their sons David and Ethan.

Selected projects

India Habitat Centre (IHC), Lodhi Road, New Delhi, in typical Stein architecture, constructed in the late 1980s.

References

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  5. A Concise History of Modern Architecture in India, by Jon T. Lang, Orient Blackswan, 2002. ISBN 81-7824-017-3. Page 45.
  6. OBITUARY - A built legacy - Joseph Allen Stein, 1912-2001 Frontline, The Hindu, Volume 18 - Issue 23, Nov. 10 - 23, 2001.
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  9. among the first skyscrapers to be constructed in India.. The Telegraph, May 19, 2006.
  10. Eicher: City Guide - Delhi, Eicher Goodearth Publications. 1998. ISBN 81-900601-2-0. Page 117.

Notes

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  • The architecture of Joseph Allen Stein in India and California, by Stephen White, Oxford University Press, 1993.
  • The responsibility for environment: First address, 9 October 1962, by Joseph Allen Stein. University of California, College of Environmental Design, 1962.

External links