Modern Architectures of North AmericaMain MenuHelp! Help! Help!SuburbiaArchitecture Relating to the Natural EnvironmentPatients, Prisoners, PoliticsIdentity: What Lies Beneath Style and FormChange and AdaptationErica Morawski - The Hotel Nacional de Cuba: Making Meanings and Negotiating NationalismsAmanda - Organic Architecture/F.L. WrightSteph - Moorish Revival ArchitectureBrittney - Sustainable Urban DesignsThe Shift: Art Deco & Modernismby Bayleigh BoganTransition to Streamline ModerneSydney - The Coppelia Ice Cream Shop in Havana, Cuba: A Cultural Moment ManifestedKatie - LevittownGenevieve - The Multifaceted Development of Creole ArchitectureThe Former Church of the Holy Communion: A Specific Example of Change and Adaptation of a Single Building Over TimeRe-Purposing a Religious BuildingZarah Ferrari: Tule Lake Segregation Center: Rising Above an Unjust SystemZarah FerrariLaura - The Suburban Kitchen in Levittown, PABy Laura Krok-HortonMarianna Mapes, Disease and the Body Politic: The National Leprosarium at Carville, LouisianaLiz - Eichler, Neutra, and the mid-century Californian SuburbV. Nash- Berkeley City Women's Club (1929), Berkeley, CA, Julia MorganJulia Morgan was a West Coast architect.Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Transition to ModernismBrendan - Academy of Music
12016-03-01T08:31:01-08:00Victoria Nashc3fac1c4e35f0dd28e5b25ef52fd96bdb174da4bWindows are recessed. An element of Beaux Arts.Victoria Nash1plain2016-03-01T08:31:01-08:0035.65%,29.46%,12.74%,11.83%Victoria Nashc3fac1c4e35f0dd28e5b25ef52fd96bdb174da4b
12016-03-01T08:26:16-08:00Victoria Nashc3fac1c4e35f0dd28e5b25ef52fd96bdb174da4bFlat roof line w/ terra cotta roof tiles. Mediterranean influenced.Victoria Nash1plain2016-03-01T08:26:16-08:0012.26%,41.72%,39.19%,5.81%Victoria Nashc3fac1c4e35f0dd28e5b25ef52fd96bdb174da4b
12016-02-15T11:52:36-08:00V. Nash- Berkeley City Women's Club (1929), Berkeley, CA, Julia Morgan19Julia Morgan was a West Coast architect.plain2016-03-06T19:40:48-08:00In form and function this building represents a modern historical movement and the modern woman behind it. Women's organizations between 1900 and 1930 in California were looking to claim and create new buildings which best served their cause. They wanted to define their own boundaries on their own terms. In 1927 they sought the iconic Bay Area native architect Julia Morgan to define their dreams. Julia Morgan was one of the first female graduates in the civil engineering at University of Berkeley (1894), the first woman to gain admission and earn a certificate from the Ecole des Baux -Arts in Paris(1898-1902), the first woman to acquire an architectural license in California(1904), and one of few women to have her own practice in the country. The Berkeley Club is affectionately referred to as, " Julia's Little Castle" and is an eclectic mix of Moorish and Gothic styles. It is a registered California Historical Landmark and currently functions as a hotel and civic club and open to all.
Citations: Karen McNeill, Women Who Build, Julia Morgan & Women's Institutions, University of California Press. (2012) Dell Upton, Architecture in the United States