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Alden B. Dow, Architect
Midland, Michigan
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Photograph by Baltazar Korab
Alden B. Dow Web Site
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While I was an undergraduate architecture student at the University
of Michigan, I worked as a draftsman-designer during the Summers of 1963-64
"up north" with the Midland architect, Alden B. Dow. It was very
stimulating for me to work with an architect who had studied directly under
the great Master Architect, Frank
Lloyd Wright. The Dow offices were split between a downtown Midland
production office and the original studio-residence (above) where the design
work was done under Mr Dow's direction. After working for some time downtown,
I finally needled them enough to let me work with Mr. Dow in the old studio.
I used to get up early in the morning and eagerly bicycle into the Dow estate,
which was surrounded by thirteen acres of the most
magnificent gardens, laid out and built for Mr. Dow's father, Herbert,
by a Japanese Zen gardener, when the house-studio was built in the 1930's.
Just being there in that wonderful setting was a profound leaning
experience. Some of my professors in Ann Arbor poo-pooed this experience
as romanticism, but time has proved them wrong. Today I think that the"organic"
architecture of Alden Dow's studio-residence was as good as (and perhaps
better than) anything Wright did. At least, it is a testament to Wright's
profound effect upon his students.
I found Mr. Dow to be a most caring teacher. Although I was the youngest
draftsman on the staff, he allowed me, alone, to browse his vast collection
of books that were located in his private studio. He loved his books, and
when he found me in the library, would spend time showing me his favorite
ones. One morning he told me I should read his entire collection of Lafcadio Hearn,
the 19th Century Irish-American writer, who assimilated into Japanese culture.
Those readings are still with me today, and although I have not yet visited
Japan, Hearn gives me some perspective on my own life in the "other"
culture of the American Southwest.
Alden, Namaste!
Your comments and feedback are welcome. Please contact Dennis
Holloway, Architect, via e-mail:
archvr@rcybermesa.com

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