William A Whifler, Architect
1925-1984
(thank you Graeme Whifler)










Drake Avenue, Burlingame, CA.......the details........







"His creations embraced modernism, yet the architecture of William A. Whifler (1925-1984) was of his own, personal, individual, inspired by the textures and light of Northern California, and by a boyhood fascination with a neighbor’s exotic house. Born in San Francisco, Whifler grew up on Drake Avenue in the Bay Area suburb of Burlingame, CA. Located at the end of a sparsely populated street, where the suburb gave way to diary pastures, the family home was a Craftsman Courtyard Bungalow surrounded by endless sprawling gardens.

For a young William Whifler it was an ordinary Peninsula neighborhood of the 1920’s and 30’s save for one unlikely structure, an authentic traditional Japanese teahouse directly across the street.
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"Whifler’s works spanned the boom times after the war, from the 1950’s to the ‘70’s, a remarkable era of seemingly endless creative architectural possibilities that today is marked by the title, Mid-Century Modern.

His designs were mostly residential, crafted of wood, glass, concrete block and steel; and sublime in form as to bring to mind names like Rudolph Schindler, Richard Neutra, or Frank Lloyd Wright.










William Whifler’s life and architectural creations were grounded in the communities of San Francisco’s Mid-Peninsula. He married his Burlingame High School sweetheart Jean, attended The College of San Mateo, graduated in architecture at Stanford University, raised his family in Hillsborough, and went on to become Professor and Co-Founder of the Department of Architecture at the College of San Mateo."




William A Whifler, Architect
1925-1984

(thank you Graeme Whifler for this....)


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