University of Oregon Libraries
Special Collections & University Archives
1299 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1299 USA
URL: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/speccoll/index.html



Guide to the Paul Lester Wiener Papers, 1913-1968


Bx 155





Finding aid prepared by

Finding aid encoded by Nathan Georgitis, 2007
Funding for encoding this finding aid was provided through a grant awarded by the National Endowment for the Humanities.


Overview of the Collection

 
Repository Name:
 

University of Oregon Libraries
Special Collections & University Archives

1299 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403-1299 USA
URL: http://libweb.uoregon.edu/speccoll/index.html

 
Collection Number:
 

Bx 155

 
Creator:
 

Wiener, Paul Lester

 
Title:
 

Paul Lester Wiener Papers

 
Dates:
 

1913-1968 (inclusive)

 
Quantity:
 

13.8 linear feet
18 containers

 
Languages:
 

Collection materials are in English and Spanish.   

 
Summary:
 

Collection comprises the papers of American architect and urban planner Paul Lester Wiener, including architectural and urban planning records for projects undertaken in Latin America, South America, Middle East, and U.S., 1934-1965; speeches, manuscripts of articles, book proposals, biographical information, and a bibliography of works by and about Wiener; and incoming and outgoing correspondence with professional associates and staff, 1913-1968. Architectural and urban planning records are arranged by project and include plans, drawings, specifications, photographs, research materials and memoranda. Major correspondents include José Luis Sert, Paul Schulz and Richard Bender.

 

Biographical Note

Paul Lester Wiener was born in Leipzig, Germany, in 1895. He was educated in the Royal Academy of Berlin with post graduate study in Vienna and Paris. He came to the United States in 1913 and became a citizen in 1919. He returned to Europe for further study and work until 1927. With Bruno Paul, Wiener founded Contempora, a group of international artists, in 1928. Returning to the United States that year, Wiener took up a comfortable architectural practice and in 1937 designed the U.S. Government building and its interiors for the International Exposition in Paris. For his work, he was awarded three Grand Prix by the Jury of the Exposition.

In 1938, Paul Lester Wiener was commissioned by the governments of Ecuador and Brazil to organize and design interiors and exhibits for these countries' pavilions at the New York World's Fair. The war years found him working with the U.S. Office of Production and Research Development as well as in his own company, Ratio Structures, Inc., to develop prefabricated and demountable housing, suitable for post war housing construction and retail marketing. In 1942, Wiener joined José Luis Sert, formerly of Barcelona, Spain, to form Town Planning Associates which was to operate until 1959 as an architectural, urban planning and site planning consultant firm of international reputation. During this period, Wiener lectured extensively in the United States and Latin America as an expert in urban planning.

With Town Planning Associates, Paul Lester Wiener accomplished his most notable work. Collaborating with Le Corbusier, Wiener and Sert originated a master plan for the city of Bogota and several other city units in Columbia which were based on the principles of planning for expected population and organizing the growth of the city in and efficient manner, as well as reorganizing existing features to provide planned living and recreational space for residents with an eye to preventing the undesirable effects of random growth such as slum housing and inequitable distribution of land, etc.

While Bogota, Cali, Medillin and Chibote were extant cities, Cidade dos Motores, Brazil, was a jungle wilderness near Rio de Janiero, when Wiener and Sert undertook to plan a city for 25,000 persons from the very beginning. Primarily conceived as an industrial community to house workers and supervisors of a huge wartime airplane factory, Cidade dos Motores presented the opportunity for the town planner to organize the total development of the urban unit. The entire plan was completed in 1949 and was widely publicized in planning circles. Other than published records, little in this collection documents Cidade dos Motores.

Wiener continued to work in Latin America, establishing a national planning commission in Havana as a base for five planning projects for the country of Cuba. Examining the work of Town Planning Associates for the three years in Cuba, it is interesting to note the political forces which played a large part in this and any planning project. The actual planning entailed a reconstruction of the core of Havana, several neighborhood and resort areas, and the planning of the Presidential Palace.

Yet another kind of planning was executed by Wiener in the project initiated by the Orinoco Mining Company in Venezuela, where private corporations worked with the government and professional planners and architects to develop two urban units and port for use by the mining company which would last past the life of the business venture as successful communities. This plan took three years to completely develop, beginning in 1951.

In 1958, Wiener accepted his most significant commission in the United States: to plan a neighborhood development in the Washington Square area of New York City, providing several thousand housing units within a six block area. Combining his concepts of clean basic lines an functional form with bold color, he designed a series of high rise apartments which incorporated outdoor patio style living with the convenience of a central urban location and exciting visual environment.

Although Wiener had done some residential designing all during his career, he turned to this more during the sixties, designing summer homes, planning renovations of apartments and houses and creating distinctive interiors for his clients. Employing straight lines relieved by bright colors and pieces of sculpture and paintings, he achieved an amenable compromise between show place and functional home. He continued in this work and as a consultant in residential housing projects until his death in 1967.

Paul Lester Wiener was a gentleman whose home, office and thoughts were open to a variety of world wide associates with whom he met to plan, to build, to discuss, to persuade. he worked to provide a pliable plan for the construction of an environment in which the human could live and work in comfort and confidence of a sustained condition of excellence. In his own words, he describes his reasons for being a planner and architect: "It has been forever my fate to want to bring order into chaos. Consequently whenever a fateful person or situation presents itself, I am compelled to try to right it in the best ways I can. [...] It proceeds from a creative instinct to construct something of balance. [...] Elements are used in designing buildings or objects by means of an idea where its component parts are formed into a homogeneous group. They are satisfying when all the component parts are properly placed in their relation to the whole. Humans are the most difficult materials for the process of the creative urge."

Content Description

The materials in the Paul Lester Wiener Papers are arranged in six sections. The first two sections are his professional work in town planning and architectural design, arranged in alphabetical order by project and subdivided into major and small project categories. The third, forth, and fifth sections are of a more personal nature and include texts of speeches, manuscripts of articles, proposals for books, biographical information and a bibliography of works by and about Mr. Wiener, including copies of some published pieces. The final section comprises incoming and outgoing correspondence; the first arranged alphabetically by agency; the latter arranged chronologically and including letters originated by Paul Lester Wiener and his professional associates, José Luis Sert, Paul Schulz, Richard Bender and members of the staff. It should be noted that this section of correspondence is primarily made up of letters not directly pertaining to the work of an individual project, but which are of a "general" nature. There is duplication of names from the project files in these general files.

One carton of photographs, slides an photographic negatives of various projects as well as material for lectures and comparative studies is included with the collection.

The collection consists of fifteen numbered cartons, following the outline of the inventory content, several pieces of oversize material stored separately, and six lettered cartons of plans, drawings, and blueprints. These plans and drawings are part of the project files and a reference to the lettered carton containing the related material is made with the entry for the individual project in the inventory. (## indicates material in lettered cartons). A similar reference to oversized material stored separately is also indicated in the body of the inventory. (** indicates oversize material.

Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Access 

Collection is open to the public.

Collection must be used in Special Collections & University Archives Reading Room.

Restrictions on Use 

Property rights reside with Special Collections & University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries. Copyright resides with the creators of the documents or their heirs. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted to the Manuscripts Librarian in Special Collections & University Archives. The reader must also obtain permission of the copyright holder.

Preferred Citation 

[Identification of item], Paul Lester Wiener Papers, Bx 155, Special Collections & University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries, Eugene, Oregon.

Related Information

Additional Reference Guides 

Paper finding aid with additional information available in Special Collections & University Archives.

Subjects

This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings.

 
Wiener, Paul Lester
Wiener, Paul Lester--Correspondence
Bogotá (Columbia)--Designs and plans
Architects--United States--Correspondence
Architecture, Domestic--Designs and plans
City planners--United States--Correspondence
German American architects--United States
Public architecture--Latin America--Designs and plans
Architectural drawings
Architectural photographs
Architectural records
Other Creators :
Sert, José Luis, 1902-1983 (contributor)
Town Planning Associates (contributor)

Detailed Description of the Collection

The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.


 
box
1


Aspen, Colorado
 
 
2

The Bahamas Planning Study
 
   
Barranquilla, Columbia
 
 
1

Brazilian Pavilion. New York World's Fair, 1939
 
 
3

Bogotá, Columbia
 
 


Chile
 
 
4

Cali
 
 


Didade dos Motores, Brazil. 1944-
 
 


Columbia. Consejo Nacional de Planification
 
 


Columbia. Regional development
 
 


Columbian Center. New York, New York. 1966?
 
 


Columbia International Center. Bogotá, Columbia
 
 
4-5

Cuba, Havana. Junta Nacional de Planification de Cuba
 
 
5

Cuba. Isla de Pinos
 
 


Cuba. Palace of the Palms. Presidential palace, Havana, Cuba
 
 


Cuba. Quinta Palatino
 
 


Cuba. Varadero
 
 
6

Italy
 
 


India
 
 


Manizales. Chile
 
 


Medellin. Columbia
 
 


Pakistan
 
 


Peru. Lima and Chimbote
 
 


Ratio Structures - Office of Scientific Research, War Production Board
 
 
6-7

Ratio Structures - Private business working with Scientific Research, War Production Board
 
 
7

Tierra Bomba Island. Cartegena, State of Bolivar, Columbia
 
 
8

Tumaco. Columbia
 
 


U.S. Government Pavilion. Paris, France. 1937
 
 


Venezuela. Curacao, Maracaibo, Matanani, and Orinoco Mining Company
 
 


Vina del Mar. Valparaiso, Chile
 
 
9

Washington Square Village. New York, New York
 
 


Alvin Theater Offices. 250 West 52nd Street. New York, New York
 
 


Lee A. Ault House. Lyford Cay, Bahama Islands (Never built)
 
 


Irving Castle House. New London, Connecticut
 
 


Cedarbrook Development. John W. Merriam Co., Wynnewood, Pennsylvania
 
 


De Cuevas, John and Mrs. Joel Carmichael. Amagansett, Long Island
 
 


Ekata. Proposal for an educational community. 1962
 
 


Gateway Center. Minneapolis, Minnesota. 1961-1964
 
 


B.H. Friedman. New York, New York
 
 


Guggenheim Museum. 1071 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 1952-1953
 
 


Guggenheim Museum. 7 East 72nd Street. New York, N.Y.
 
 


High Bridge Air Rights Project. The Bronx, N.Y. 1962
 
 


Jefferson-Riverdale Urban Renewal Project. Yonkers, N.Y. 1963
 
 


Earl Johnson House. Southampton, Long Island. 1966
 
 


Patrick Lennon Residence. New York, N.Y.
 
 


Lincoln Square Housing Development
 
 


Liturgical Conference. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 1961
 
 


Drs. Henry and Yela Lowenfield House. Wading River, Long Island
 
 


Murray Hill Apartments. 34th Street and Third. New York, N.Y. 1959-1960
 
 


Olivetti Corporation of America. New York, N.Y. 1954
 
 


Samuel and Reed Rubin Housing Development. Amagansett, Long Island. 1961
 
 
10

Ronald Saypol House. East Hampton, Long Island. 1962-1964
 
 


Mrs. H. Schapiro. East Hampton, Long Island. 1967
 
 


Robert C. Scull House. East Hampton, Long Island
 
 


Shenango Valley, Pennsylvania. Planning Commission. 1959
 
 


Shop City. Syracuse, New York
 
 


Beatrice Simpson House. Amagansett, Long Island
 
 


Marvin Small Residence. East Hampton, Long Island. 1966
 
 


Andres Uribe. 870 Park Avenue. Corporation office renovation. New York, N.Y.
 
 


United Nations Pavilion. Geneva. 1957-1958
 
 


Van Leer Metal Products Company. Home office. Amsterdam, The Netherlands
 
 


Watchung, New Jersey. Blue Star Shopping Center. 1959
 
 


J. Daniel Weitzman Residence. New York, N.Y. 1959
 
 


Paul Lester Wiener Residence. East Hampton. Long Island. Renovation and lease. 1952. Property of Jeffrey B. Potter
 
 


Miscellaneous projects
 
 


Miscellaneous photographs
 
 


Exhibits of the work of Paul Lester Wiener
 
 


Professional organizations which Paul Lester Wiener helped organize or support
 
 
11

Manuscripts, speeches, lecture notes, reports by Paul Lester Wiener
 
 
12

Biographical material
 
 
12-13

Correspondence, outgoing (2972 letters)
 
 
14

Correspondence, incoming 1932-1968 (2522 letters)
 
 
15

Photographs
 
 
16

Addenda, December 1972
 
 
17

Addenda, May 1973
 
 
18

Addenda, May 1974