Margaret Van Pelt Vilas (1905–1995) was an architect active in New York City and New Haven, Connecticut beginning in the 1930s through the 1960s.[1] In 1958, she opened her own practice based in New Haven and continued to practice throughout the 1960s, becoming very active in Pan-American architectural relations through the AIA.[2] She died in 1995, at the age of 90.[3]
Education
Margaret Van Pelt was born in Ithaca, New York on January 26, 1905 to John Vredenburgh Van Pelt and Betsey Southworth.[4]
Van Pelt began her career with an early partnership 1926-1930 with her father, a prominent architect and architectural professor, in New York City from 1926 to 1930.[1] In 1930, she traveled throughout Europe for a year, where she was impressed and inspired by the prolific use of glass and metal, particularly in Germany.[5] In 1933, she began work as a draftsman at the firm of Mayers, Murray & Phillip in New York City; she then moved to the firm of Aymar Embury in 1936, where she worked as a renderer. From 1936 to 1942, she worked as a draftsman with the Department of Public Works in the Department of Hospitals and the Department of Parks.
During World War II from 1942 to 1945, she completed a tool design course at Yale University and worked as a designer at M.B. Manufacturing Company in New Haven, CT.[1] The company was known during WWII for producing airplane parts.[6]
She began working for the Connecticut-based office of Douglas Orr in 1946, remaining there for twelve years until 1958, when she established her own firm based in New Haven, Connecticut.[2] By 1962, she was a registered architect in Connecticut, New York, and Rhode Island, and had completed residential, commercial, and educational projects throughout the United States.[2]
During the 1960s, she became active in her local AIA chapter, serving as the AIA delegate to the X Panamerican Federation of Architects Congress in Buenos Aires; in 1961 and 1962, she was Chairman of the AIA delegation to the first and second round tables of Pan American Federation of Architects in Lima, Peru and São Paulo, Brasil.[1] She remained active in the Panamerican Congress of Architects into 1965, when she was Chairman of the "Themes" committee at the Joint AIA convention and Congress.[1]
As one of the few practicing female architects in the early 1930s, she declared in a 1931 interview: "I don't believe there is such a thing as a woman's point of view in architecture. There is architecture that is good and that is bad."[5]
Personal life
Van Pelt married Charles Harrison Vilas in 1932 in Patchogue, Long Island at the summer home of her parents.[7] Vilas worked in the printing industry for Paper Mills of Chicago, and the two became avid sailors. Their daughter Diana Van Pelt Vilas born in March 1939.[8]
She died in 1995, at the age of 90, in New Haven, CT.[3]
Built works
Memorial Bench of Andrew Hasewell Green, Central Park, New York City[5][9]
Seaman's Church Institute, New York City, ground floor renovation (1959)[2]
Residence of Mrs. Ely Grlswold, Old Lyme, Conn (1961)[2]
Res. of John V. Van Pelt, Birmingham, Alabama (1961)[2]
Illustrations in "From Here to There... With Nothing But the Wind," by Charles H. Vila, in Cruising World. Vol. 1, No. 6 (1975): 42-46.
Illustrations in "Triple Roller Headsails," by Charles H. Vila, in The Best Of Sail Trim
References
^ abcdeThe AIA Historical Directory of American Architects, s.v. "Vilas, Margaret Van Pelt," (ahd1046399), http://www.aia.org/about/history/aiab082017 (accessed Oct. 17, 2015). - See more at: http://public.aia.org/sites/hdoaa/wiki/Wiki%20Pages/Citation%20and%20Use.aspx#sthash.CLa1OnLM.dpufhttp://public.aia.org/sites/hdoaa/wiki/Wiki%20Pages/ahd1046399.aspxArchived 2016-04-18 at the Wayback Machine
^ abcdef"Vilas, Maragaret Van Pelt." American Architects Directory, 1962. 2nd Edition. George S. Koyl, FAIA, ed. (New York: R. R. Bowker Company, 1962), 727.
^ abConnecticut Death Index, 1949-2012, via ancestry.com
^ abc"Vilas, Margaret Van Pelt." American Architects Directory, 1956. George S. Koyl, FAIA, ed. (New York: R. R. Bowker Company, 1955), 576.
^ abcdNEA Service (8 October 1931). "Girl Architect Tells Of Glass House Idea". The China Press. p. A1.