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Show NEW FIRM OF ARCHITECTS OPENS OFFICES IN SALT LAKE tf ! I fer- A f4"lXf V s h rS ., . ..r.. - ... -J r 4 t5 " ? ; I t , y, miwufe minriftiinf ii.nfafmti.rirffMa Miles E. Miller ' Taylor Woolley Clifford Evans Announcement of the formation of a partnership for the general practice of their profession has been made bv Miles K. Miller. Taylor Woolley and Clifford Evans, three well-known architects of Salt Lake. Well-equipped offices have been opened in the "Vermont building, with organization and facilities not heretofore combined in a single local concern. Mr. Miller will have charge of the business organization, superintendence and out-of-town work. Mr. Woollev will handle the designing, city work and landscape architecture, an innovation innova-tion here. Mr. Evans will have the engineering en-gineering department and office management. man-agement. All members of the new firm are natives na-tives of Utah. Mr. Miller was born at Eiverton and studied at the L. D'. S. unversity and the University of Utah. He has been in practice here for seven years and has been connected with the designing and construction of the Carnegie Car-negie library, Greek church and Price school at Price, the Thatcher' school and Thatcher meeting house at Thatcher, Thatch-er, Idaho, the Catholic church and Lowenstein Mercantile building at i Helper, the San Juan State Bank build- j ing at Blanding, the New Temple hotel ho-tel and the Joseph William Taylor building, Salt Lake, the Carbon Stake tabernacle, the Parowan Stake tabernacle, taber-nacle, the Carey meeting house and the Mesa meeting house. He is an active member of the Utah Association of Architects, in which he is serving his second term as secretary. Mr. Woolley is a native of Salt Lakb, where he received his earlyprof essional training in the offices of Ware & Tre-ganza. Tre-ganza. He later attended the Chicago Art institute and then entered the offices of-fices of Prank Lloyd Wright, the famous fa-mous Chicago architect, with whom he remained five years. One year of this period was spent in European travel with Mr. Wright. Following that experience, ex-perience, Mr. Woolley was with Howard Shaw of Chicago and Grosvenor Atter-bnrv Atter-bnrv of New York and had charge of the'Chicago office of Von Hoist & Fyfe during construction of the Henry Ford estate at Dearborn, Mich. He has just returned to Salt Lake after having been fourteen months with Walter Bur- ley Griffin of Chicago, architect for the Capital City of Australia and celebrated cele-brated town planner and landscape architect. His local work includes do-signing do-signing the homes of Ferd J. Fabian, R. B. Harkness, W. Ray, A. H. Woolley, John Jensen, Andrew Jenson, and several attractive canyon homes. He was also intimately associated with the development of Highland park. Mr. Evans is also a Salt Laker, whose professional work has taken him to many parts of the United States and given him an unusually varied practical experience in recent years. His earlier professional training "was in the office of S. C. Dallas, architect of the Salt Lake Citv Board of Education. He developed de-veloped his natural inclination toward the engineering side of the profession through study at Columbia university, New York, and in engineering offices of that city. He then entered the office of-fice of Frank Lloyd Wright at Chicago and was connected with many of the important enterprises handled by that office. His work has been in Utah and Idaho for several months past. (Advertisement.) |