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OSU Home » Faculty/Staff » OSU Press » Beauty of the City.

Beauty of the City: A. E. Doyle, Portland's Architect


Beauty of the City: A. E. Doyle, Portland's Architect book cover
Philip Niles

2008. 7 x 10 inches. 352 pages. B&W photographs. Index.
ISBN 978-0-87071-298-2. Paperback, $29.95.


The Central Library, Benson Hotel, Reed College, the Meier & Frank building, the U.S. National Bank—these are just a few of the grand Portland icons designed by Albert E. Doyle. During a period of rapid growth in Portland, Oregon, after the Lewis & Clark Centennial Exposition and before the Great Depression, Doyle (1877-1928) was the city’s most important architect.

Beauty of the City is the first biography of this celebrated architect. Doyle’s career was short, just twenty-one years. Yet everywhere Portland retains his imprint. Many of Doyle’s classical, often white terra-cotta buildings became venerable city landmarks. He also designed Portland residences, Neahkahnie beach cottages, and houses and banks in Oregon and Washington.

Using A. E. Doyle’s own diaries and letters and his firm’s records, historian Philip Niles traces the architect’s life and times in the context of the burgeoning cityscape. As Portland expanded beyond its frontier origins and provincialism, Doyle helped introduce Eastern and European sophistication. Indeed, his refined sensibility influenced the development of the Northwest Regional Style by Pietro Belluschi and John Yeon, among others. Doyle set the standard for elegance and proportion that later architects adapted to more modern styles—his standard defines Portland’s vibrant core and contributes to the city’s beauty as much today as it did eighty years ago.

Readers interested in Northwest history and culture will appreciate this compelling and richly illustrated biography of “Portland’s architect.” Likewise, architectural historians and those seeking to better understand Portland’s architectural heritage will enjoy reading of Doyle’s contributions to this celebrated cityscape.

“All new things built with the idea of preserving the beauty of the city and adding to it."
-A. E. Doyle
About the Author

Philip Niles is Professor Emeritus of History at Carleton College. A Portland native, he returned to the city in 1999.


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