Bernardi, Theodore C., 1903-1990

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Biographical Note

William W. Wurster/Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons

William Wilson Wurster, born in California in 1895, earned his degree in architecture from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1919. After obtaining his license in 1922, he worked briefly in firms in Sacramento and New York, then opened the firm William W. Wurster in 1924. He gained national recognition early in his career with an award-winning design for the Gregory farmhouse (Scotts Valley, 1927), and became the most well-known modernist architect in the Bay Area.

Wurster's work, primarily residential during this time, was widely exhibited and published. The Colby house (Berkeley, 1931) and Voss house (Big Sur, 1931) were included in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. At the same time, Wurster was developing friendships with landscape architects Lockwood deForest and Thomas Church. Though he worked with both men, his collaborative relationship with Church was particularly strong, and he designed a house for the landscape architect in 1931. During a 1937 trip to Europe, Wurster and Church met and befriended Finnish architect Alvar Aalto, who became an influence on both men's work.

In 1939, Wurster met the public housing and community planning expert Catherine Bauer, and the two were married the following year. At this point, the firm was involved in the design of numerous defense housing communities. Defense housing, administered initially by the Federal Works Agency and later by the National Housing Agency, was necessary to accommodate the manufacturing and production workers who had come to California to work in shipbuilding and aircraft industries. Often working with Church, Wurster completed defense housing projects that encompassed over 5,000 units in Vallejo alone.

In 1943, Wurster closed his firm so that he could study planning at Harvard. Both Yale and MIT invited him to teach, and by 1944 he had become Dean of Architecture at MIT, a post he held until 1950. Catherine Bauer Wurster taught planning at Harvard University during the same period. In 1944, Wurster formed a partnership with former employee Theodore Bernardi, and with the addition of Donn Emmons, also a former employee, in 1945, the firm became Wurster, Bernardi, and Emmons (WBE). During his years at MIT, Wurster spent only vacations in San Francisco and Bernardi and Emmons effectively ran the firm.

Bernardi earned his architecture degree at University of California, Berkeley in 1924, and obtained his license in 1933 after completing post-graduate work. He joined Wurster's firm in 1934, and within a few years became one of two chief draftsmen. He spent two years in independent practice before accepting Wurster's offer of partnership. Between 1954 and 1971 he served as a lecturer in the Department of Architecture at U.C. Berkeley.

Emmons joined Wurster's firm in 1938. Educated at Cornell University and the University of Southern California, Emmons spent four years in various architectural firms in Los Angeles before moving north to work with Wurster. He spent four years as a draftsman in Wurster's office before joining the Naval Reserves during World War II. Upon his release in 1945, he joined Wurster and Bernardi as a partner in the firm.

Wurster returned to the Bay Area in 1950 to become Dean of Architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, a position he held until his retirement in 1963. In 1959 he brought the departments of architecture, landscape architecture, and city and regional planning together to become the College of Environmental Design. WBE incorporated in 1963 and continued to produce award-winning designs, receiving the American Institute of Architects' Architectural Firm Award in 1965. All three partners had been named Fellows of the AIA by this time, and Wurster was later honored with the AIA Gold Medal Award for lifetime achievement in 1969.

After Wurster's death in 1973, the two younger partners continued running the firm until the mid-1980s. As of 1999, WBE continues to exist without the original partners.

Sources: Montgomery, Roger. "William Wilson Wurster and the College of Environmental Design," in Inside the Large Small House: The Residential Design Legacy of William W. Wurster. Berkeley: The Regents of the University of California, 1995. Peters, Richard C. "WWWurster." The Journal of Architectural Education. 33 (1979): 36-41 Treib, Marc, ed. An Everyday Modernism: The Houses of William Wurster. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995.

From the guide to the William W. Wurster/Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons collection, 1922-1974, (Environmental Design Archives. College of Environmental Design.)

Biographical Note

Theodore C. Bernardi (1903 - 1990)

Theodore C. Bernardi was born in Korčula,Yugoslavia (then Austria-Hungary), in 1903. A year later, his mother and uncle brought him to the United States to join his father who was already in America. In 1906 the family returned to Yugoslavia where Bernardi attended school until the family once again moved to the U.S. in 1912. Bernardi studied architecture at the University of California, Berkeley; he earned his bachelor's degree in 1924 and continued with graduate studies. Over the next nine years he supplemented his academic studies by working as an architect and draftsman in a number of Bay Area firms, including the office of Timothy Pflueger.

Bernardi obtained his architectural license in 1933, and joined the firm of William W. Wurster the following year where, during the next eight years, he lead the design and construction of major Wurster office projects, including more than a dozen government housing projects. When William Wurster left the Bay Area for Harvard University to study and later become Dean of the School of Architecture and Planning at MIT from 1944 to 1950, Bernardi directed the Wurster office in San Francisco. And in 1944, an official professional partnership between Bernardi and Wurster was formed; Donn Emmons joined this partnership in 1946 and the firm Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons (WBE) was born. Bernardi was Principal-in-Charge of many major WBE projects, including the Schuckl Canning Company office building in Sunnyvale (1930), the Master Plan for University of California Santa Cruz (1962), the Ice House renovation in San Francisco's North Waterfront (1967), and the First Unitarian Church of Berkeley (located in Kensington). His own home in Sausalito (1950) won a 1956 AIA Award of Merit in 1956.

In addition to his work with WBE, Bernardi was a lecturer in the UC Berkeley Department of Architecture between 1954 and 1971. In 1962 he was elected to Fellowship in the American Institute of Architects, and in 1965 WBE won the AIA Architectural Firm Award Medal. Though his role in the firm became less active during the 1970s, Bernardi continued to work on projects until his death in 1990.

From the guide to the Theodore C. Bernardi Collection, 1920-1934, 1955-1968, (Environmental Design Archives. College of Environmental Design. University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf William W. Wurster/Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons collection, 1922-1974 Environmental Design Archives
creatorOf Theodore C. Bernardi Collection, 1920-1934, 1955-1968 Environmental Design Archives
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Bernardi, Thoedore C., 1903- person
associatedWith Church, Thomas Dolliver person
associatedWith Emmons, Donn person
associatedWith Historic American Buildings Survey corporateBody
associatedWith Sturtevant, Roger person
associatedWith United States corporateBody
associatedWith Wurster, Bernardi and Emmons corporateBody
associatedWith Wurster, William Wilson person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Subject
Architects
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1903

Death 1990

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