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    <eadid identifier="charles-chuck-reed-jr-collection-of-architecture-drawings" countrycode="US" mainagencycode="US-FQG" url="https://atom.library.miami.edu/charles-chuck-reed-jr-collection-of-architecture-drawings" encodinganalog="identifier">ARC6104</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper encodinganalog="title">Charles (Chuck) Reed, Jr. Collection of Architecture Drawings</titleproper>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Architecture Research Center, University of Miami Libraries</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>Architecture Research Center<lb/>1223 Dickinson Drive</addressline>
          <addressline>Coral Gables</addressline>
          <addressline>FL</addressline>
          <addressline>United States</addressline>
          <addressline>33146</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: (305) 284-5282</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: gsantana@miami.edu</addressline>
          <addressline>https://library.miami.edu/architecture/</addressline>
        </address>
        <date normal="2024-10-17" encodinganalog="date">2024-10-17</date>
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      <langusage>
        <language langcode="eng">English</language>
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    <did>
      <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Charles (Chuck) Reed, Jr. Collection of Architecture Drawings</unittitle>
      <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104</unitid>
      <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        Three boxes (33x12x6.5 in) with rolled architectural blueprints, floor plans, drawings, and renderings of projects created by Charles Reed. Approximately 60 rolls containing multiple sheets.    </physdesc>
      <repository>
        <corpname>Architecture Research Center, University of Miami Libraries</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>Architecture Research Center<lb/>1223 Dickinson Drive</addressline>
          <addressline>Coral Gables</addressline>
          <addressline>FL</addressline>
          <addressline>United States</addressline>
          <addressline>33146</addressline>
          <addressline>Telephone: (305) 284-5282</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: gsantana@miami.edu</addressline>
          <addressline>https://library.miami.edu/architecture/</addressline>
        </address>
      </repository>
      <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
        <persname id="atom_926429_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
      </origination>
    </did>
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      <note>
        <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
      </note>
    </bioghist>
    <odd type="publicationStatus">
      <p>Published</p>
    </odd>
    <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
      <p>Drawings, plans, photographs, writing</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <controlaccess>
      <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
      <genreform>Photographs</genreform>
      <genreform>Articles</genreform>
      <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
      <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
      <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
      <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
      <geogname>Miami (Fla.)</geogname>
    </controlaccess>
    <acqinfo encodinganalog="3.2.4">
      <p>Donation made by Melissa Reed, daughter of Charles Reed</p>
    </acqinfo>
    <dsc type="combined">
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mr &amp; Mrs William Thomas House, Ft. Lauderdale, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_001</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959223_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs William Thomas in Ft. Lauderdale</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <geogname>Fort Lauderdale (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Geometric Designs</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_002</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 prints, 138 pencil on trace, 3 pencil and ink on trace, 8 pencil on paper, 7 oil pastel on trace, 6 colored pencil on trace, 4 ink on trace, 1 oil pastel and pencil on trace, 1 print on board    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959228_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Preliminary geometric designs for various projects done by Charles Reed Jr</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">A&amp;L</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_003</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1959-06-08/1959-06-08" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959-06-08</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pencil and ink on trace, 2 pencil on trace, 1 printed text description    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959235_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
            <name id="atom_959248_actor">Walter Harry Engineers</name>
            <name id="atom_959249_actor">Gerald J. Spolter Engineer</name>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of patio house for A&amp;L</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <geogname>Dania (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">A Patio House in Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_004</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1958-11-12/1958-11-12" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958-11-12</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pencil and ink on trace, 1 print on board    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959243_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of A Patio House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Marta Lepes House, Hilo, Hawaii</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_005</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1988-11-25/1988-11-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1988-11-25</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pencil on trace, 2 pencil on trace, 1 colored pencil on trace, 6 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959259_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for Marta Lepes in Hawaii</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hilo (Hawaii)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mr. &amp; Mrs. Henry Zimmerman Studio</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_005</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1959-11-16/1959-11-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959-11-16</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace, 3 pencil and ink on mylar    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959680_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of studio apartment for Mr &amp; Mrs Henry Zimmerman</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <geogname>Dania (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Chadwick</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_006</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1998-04-11/1998-04-11" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1998-04-11</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959699_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of Chadwick Development</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">4221 Racoon Bay Drive</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_008</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959705_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of project at 4221 Racoon Bay Drive</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mr. &amp; Mrs. A.H. Gould House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_009</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-02-20</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 prints, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace, 5 pencil on trace, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959714_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs A. H. Gould</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">William Cambell Residence, Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_010</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959723_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of residence for Mr. William Cambell</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Tognoli</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_011</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1959-09-19/1959-09-19" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959-09-19</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil with color on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959732_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Mrs. Tognoli</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Dania (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ulbrich</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_012</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1959-11-17/1959-11-17" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959-11-17</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959741_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of duplex for Mr &amp; Mrs Henry Ulbrich</p>
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        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Dania (Fla.)</geogname>
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        <did>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Polevitzky</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_013</unitid>
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        3 prints    </physdesc>
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            <name id="atom_959751_actor">Miller Design Group</name>
            <persname id="atom_959752_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of Polevitzky house</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bernard House, Key Biscayne, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_014</unitid>
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        10 prints, 9 pencil and ink on trace, 10 pencil on trace, 1 pencil and ink on bond, 2 printed text descriptions    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959761_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings, renderings and prints of Bernard House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Key Biscayne (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Reed House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_015</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1952-12-15/1952-12-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1952-12-15</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pencil on vellum, 1 pencil and ink on vellum, 3 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959773_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings of Reed House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wainwright House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_016</unitid>
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        1 print, 7 pencil and ink on trace, 1 pencil on trace, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace, 4 pencil on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959782_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Wainwright House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Miami Beach (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">String House, Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_017</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pencil and ink on trace, 8 prints, 3 pencil on trace, 4 pencil on vellum, 1 ink on trace, 1 pencil and ink on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959791_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings for James String Residence</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood, FL</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Doctors Building</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_018</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-10-11/1957-10-11" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-10-11</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959800_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Doctors Building</p>
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        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood Beach (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Residence for Mr. and Mrs. E.D. Haughton, Ft. Pierce, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_019</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1955-05-31/1955-05-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1955-05-31</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pencil renderings and plans on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959812_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of residence for Mr &amp; Mrs E.D. Haughton</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Fort Pierce (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Hodge Nasir</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_020</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2006-06-16/2006-06-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2006-06-16</unitdate>
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        10 pencil on trace, 31 prints    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_959818_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Hodge Nasir House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ascot</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_021</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2001-01-20/2001-01-20" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2001-01-20</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on vellum, 3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_959827_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of prefabricated house for Ascot LTD in Freeport, Grand Bahama Island</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Caribbean</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Freeport (Bahamas)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">School Planning</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_022</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1962-05-01/1962-05-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962-05-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        63 prints, 55 pencil on trace, 31 pencil and ink on trace, 10 colored pencil and pencil on trace, 1 pencil on paper, 7 ink on trace, 14 pencil on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960094_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings relating to Reed Jr's school planning in Florida and North Carolina, ranging from elementary to high schools.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Brill House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_023</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        8 prints, 2 pencil on trace, 3 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960104_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings of Arthur Brill House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">First Christian Church</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_024</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-11-28/1957-11-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-11-28</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960113_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of First Christian Church of Hollywood Florida</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Lynn Fisher</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_025</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1997-02-19/1997-02-19" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1997-02-19</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        19 pencil on trace, 9 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960120_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings of Lynn Fisher House in Raleigh, North Carolina</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Broward Abstract Corporation</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_026</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1958-05-01/1958-05-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958-05-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pencil and ink on trace, 1 pencil on trace, 4 pencil and ink on trace, 2 printed text descriptions    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960129_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of office building for Broward Abstract Corporation</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Stardust Homes</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_027</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-09-27/1957-09-27" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-09-27</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 prints, 22 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960139_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of Stardust Homes types 1-6 in Melbourne, FL</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Melbourne (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Jerolaman</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_028</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1962-04-22/1962-04-22" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962-04-22</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        9 pencil on trace, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace, 14 pencil and ink on trace, 1 ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960147_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of office building for Mr. J. Jerolaman in Hollywood, FL</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Kest</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_029</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-04-01/1957-04-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-04-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960156_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for Leonard Kest</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Home Federal Employees Trust Building</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_030</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960-02-10/1960-02-10" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-02-10</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil and ink on mylar    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960162_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Home Federal Employees Trust Building</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Commercial</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_031</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pencil on trace, 1 pencil on paper, 1 ink on trace, 1 print on board    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960168_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of various commercial projects Charles Reed Jr produced</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Friend House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_032</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2008-08-20/2008-08-20" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2008-08-20</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960177_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of house for Louis Friend</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Dover Road</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_033</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2000-07-16/2000-07-16" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2000-07-16</unitdate>
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        3 print, 2 pencil on trace, 1 pencil on paper    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960183_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print and original drawings of Dover Road House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Mountain House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_034</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1970-08-08/1970-08-08" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1970-08-08</unitdate>
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        5 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960191_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of mountain house for Mr &amp; Mrs Leroy Robbins in North Carolina</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Boone (North Carolina)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">North Carolina Treasurer's Office</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_035</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2009-05-18/2009-05-18" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2009-05-18</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 prints, 3 pencil on trace, 1 pencil on paper    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960198_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of Treasurer's Offices of North Carolina</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>North Carolina</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">West Hollywood Presbyterian Church</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6140_036</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        25 pencil and ink on trace, 2 printed text descriptions    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960207_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of West Hollywood Presbyterian Church</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Manuel Rosenthal</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_037</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1958-12-15/1958-12-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958-12-15</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 print, 1 pencil and ink on trace, 1 pencil on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960222_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of house for Manuel Rosenthal</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Simon</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_038</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1956-01-01/1956-01-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956-01-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        18 pencil on trace, 1 ink on trace, 4 prints, 2 printed text descriptions    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960229_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
            <name id="atom_960230_actor">D.E. Britt Associates</name>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for Dr. Simon</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House for Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Manesiotis</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_038</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1959-03-19/1959-03-19" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959-03-19</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on paper, 4 pencil and ink on trace, 3 prints, 4 prints with colored pencil    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960239_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print and original drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Angelo Manesiotis in Hollywood Hills</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">H&amp;L Builders</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_040</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960-08-01/1960-08-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-08-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 prints, 9 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960245_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of house typologies for H&amp;L Builders, particularly types 2, 3, and 4</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Low Cost Housing Typologies</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_041</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-05-14/1957-05-14" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-05-14</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 prints, 5 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960252_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of low cost housing types 1-6</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Plyes</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_042</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1975-10-12/1975-10-12" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1975-10-12</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 prints, 17 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960260_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of house for Gordon and Janice Plye in North Caroline</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Valle Crucis (North Carolina)</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Stone</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_043</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 prints, 1 pencil o2 trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960266_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of houses for Mr. Stone</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Office Buildings</unittitle>
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        3 pencil on trace, 11 pencil and ink on trace, 2 text on trace, 2 pencil and ink on vellum    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960272_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of various office building projects Charles Reed Jr produced, notably for Mr. Herb Harris and for Reasbeck &amp; Fegers</p>
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          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Eau Galley</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_045</unitid>
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        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960278_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for Eau Galley</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Manella</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_046</unitid>
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        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960284_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawing of Manella House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">110</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_047</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1979-02-01/1979-02-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1979-02-01</unitdate>
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        7 prints, 5 pencil on vellum, 11 pencil on trace, 4 ink on trace, 2 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960290_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of 110</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Orange Blossom Highway</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_048</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960299_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Orange Blossom Highway interventions</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Florida</geogname>
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          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wildman</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_049</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1961-05-24/1961-05-24" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1961-05-24</unitdate>
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        4 prints, 3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960305_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of residence for Mr &amp; Mrs Marvin Wildman</p>
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        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">The Islander</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_050</unitid>
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        1 print, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960314_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawing of The Islander, a house at Freeport, Grand Bahama</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Caribbean</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Freeport (Bahamas)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">North Carolina DSP</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_051</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1972-07-31/1972-07-31" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1972-07-31</unitdate>
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        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960324_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawing of North Carolina DSP</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Catawba County (North Carolina)</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Samuels</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_052</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1956-09-05/1956-09-05" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956-09-05</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace, 1 print    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960337_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of proposed house Dr Samuels and family</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Articles</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_053</unitid>
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        10 printed pages (5 articles)    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <name id="atom_960351_actor">Louis Friend</name>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Articles written about Charles Reed Jr and his life, as well as his wife, Elaine Reed.</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Articles</genreform>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Spencer</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_054</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">2005</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace, 9 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960361_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>House for Mr &amp; Mrs Dean W. Spencer</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Roof House, Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_055</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 diazotype print, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960381_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of house for Ms &amp; Mrs Roof</p>
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          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Schlikte</unittitle>
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        1 print    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960401_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Print of Schlitke residence</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Park Planning</unittitle>
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        2 pencil on paper, 1 print    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960408_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print and original drawings of various park planning projects that Charles Reed Jr conducted	2 pencil on paper, 1 print</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Horie House</unittitle>
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        7 prints, 10 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960415_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings and preliminary drawings of Horie House, for Donna Horie and Mr &amp; Mrs Yasuki Horie</p>
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          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Dring</unittitle>
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        1 ink on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960424_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Perry Dring in Miami, FL</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <geogname>Miami (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House 1242</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_060</unitid>
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        2 prints, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960430_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawing of development house 1242</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gutherie</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_061</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1977-01-05/1977-01-05" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1977-01-05</unitdate>
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        8 print, 1 pencil on vellum, 1 ink on trace, 1 print with colored pencil, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960436_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print and original drawings of Gutherie House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House Remodeling for Barry and Ashley Mann, Raleigh, NC</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_062</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1989</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960443_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Barry &amp; Ashley Mann in Raleigh, North Carolina</p>
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          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Zuckerman</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_063</unitid>
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        3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960449_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Zuckerman houses</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Turney</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_064</unitid>
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        1 print    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960455_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawing of preliminary study of Turney House</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">1508 Princess St</unittitle>
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        3 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960463_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of house at 1508 Princess St, Wilmington, North Carolina</p>
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          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Wilmington (North Carolina)</geogname>
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        <did>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wood</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_066</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1979-01-28/1979-01-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1979-01-28</unitdate>
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        2 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960470_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of additions to home for Ernie and Laura Wood in Raleigh, North Carolina</p>
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          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Abrams</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_067</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1964-06-04/1964-06-04" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1964-06-04</unitdate>
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        2 prints, 1 ink on trace, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960479_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print of house for Mr &amp; Mrs James Abrams in Miami</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Miami (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Franklin</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_068</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1973-04-10/1973-04-10" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1973-04-10</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 print, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960486_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings of kitchen remodel for Mr &amp; Mrs Ken Franklin</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House for Jan Martel, Hillsborough, NC</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_069</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1974-07-25/1974-07-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1974-07-25</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 prints, 7 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960494_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print and original drawings of house for Jan Martel</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <geogname>Hillsborough (North Carolina)</geogname>
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          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gordon House, Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_070</unitid>
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        2 diazotype prints, 4 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960500_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Prints and drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Allan Gordon, Hollywood, FL</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bauer House, Deerfield, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_071</unitid>
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        1 pencil and ink on trace, 1 diazotype    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960510_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Bauer in Deerfield</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Deerfield (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Bowling House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_072</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1985</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        4 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960516_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Jim Bowling</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Heiden House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_073</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 pencil on trace, 4 pencil on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960525_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Heiden House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Teller House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_074</unitid>
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        8 pencil and ink on trace, 4 prints, 2 pencil and ink on vellum, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960534_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Teller House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <geogname>Miami (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Lawson House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_075</unitid>
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        1 ink on vellum, 1 ink on cardboard, 4 pencil and ink on trace, 1 print, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960543_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Lawson House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gahstrom House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_076</unitid>
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        4 pencil on vellum, 1 print    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960552_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Gahstrom House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Ritchie House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_077</unitid>
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        1 ink on trace, 11 pencil on trace, 1 pencil on vellum, 2 printed text descriptions,    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960561_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Ritchie House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Jaffe House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_078</unitid>
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        2 preliminary notes, 7 pencil on vellum, 9 pencil on trace, 1 ink on trace, 3 prints, 1 pencil and ink on trace, 1 pencil and color on trace,  2 printed text descriptions    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960570_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Jaffe House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Peck House</unittitle>
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        4 prints, 1 pencil and color on paper, 1 pencil and ink on paper    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960576_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of Peck House</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Wicker House, Hollywood, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_080</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1959</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pencil and ink on trace, 1 pencil and ink on vellum, 1 pencil and ink on paper    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960585_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of Robert Wicker House, Hollywood, FL</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
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          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Emerman House, Coconut Grove, FL</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_081</unitid>
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        18 prints, 12 pencil on trace, 18 pencil and ink on trace, 2 pencil and ink on vellum, 2 printed text descriptions, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960594_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original and print drawings of residence for Mr. &amp; Mrs. Mack Emerman</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Coconut Grove (Miami, Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Jones</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_082</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2003-11-12/2003-11-12" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2003-11-12</unitdate>
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        3 pencil on trace, 1 pencil and colored pencil on trace, 3 prints    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960600_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Sue and Jesse Jones</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Cathcart</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_083</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="2004-02-15/2004-02-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">2004-02-15</unitdate>
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        23 pencil on trace, 11 prints with colored pencil, 23 prints    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960607_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house and additions for  Cathcart in North Carolina</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Robbins</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_084</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1998-06-06/1998-06-06" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1998-06-06</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 prints, 1 print on mylar, 2 pencil on trace, 1 colored pencil and pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960617_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of house for Marvin and Eleanor Robbins in Bonita Springs</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Bonita Springs (Fla.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">3012 Ridge Road</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_085</unitid>
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        8 print, 1 pencil on vellum, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960628_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of project at 3012 Ridge Road</p>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Nashick</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_086</unitid>
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        4 pencil on trace, 1 print with oil pastel, 1 print    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960634_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Mrs. Nashick</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Brigadoon</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_087</unitid>
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        2 prints, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960643_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawing of Brigadoon, a house at Nassau for Habor Homes</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Caribbean</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Nassau (Bahamas)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Jablonski</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_088</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1962-03-21/1962-03-21" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1962-03-21</unitdate>
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        3 prints, 3 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960649_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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          <p>Print drawing of house for Mr Jablonski</p>
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          <geogname>Rochester (N.Y.)</geogname>
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          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Schmidt Exhibition</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_089</unitid>
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        1 ink on trace, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960655_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawing of exhibition booth for Joe Schmidt</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gottlieb</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_090</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1971-12-01/1971-12-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971-12-01</unitdate>
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        3 print, 2 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
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            <persname id="atom_960664_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Larry Gottlieb</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Greenberg</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_091</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1958-05-07/1958-05-07" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1958-05-07</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        6 prints, 1 pencil on trace, 3 ink on trace, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960670_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawing of house for Mr &amp; Mrs Robert Greenberg</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Davidoff</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_092</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960679_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
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        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawings of house for Mrs. Davidoff</p>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Gusky</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_093</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960688_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house addition for Mr &amp; Mrs Sanford Gusky</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Lefkowitz</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_094</unitid>
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        1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960697_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of proposed alterations for Mr &amp; Mrs Morton Lefkowitz</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Miami (Fla.)</geogname>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">House and Offices for Don Hulmes</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_095</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1956-09-03/1956-09-03" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1956-09-03</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pencil on trace, 8 pencil and ink on trace, 6 prints, 1 pencil on vellum    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960706_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original and print drawings of Hulmes House</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">S.M.Y Builders</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_096</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-11-01/1957-11-01" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-11-01</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        11 pencil on trace, 10 prints    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960716_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
            <name id="atom_960717_actor">Gerard J Spolter Structural Engineer</name>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings various houses for S.M.Y Builders, particularly House 1296 and House 1069</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Lechtner</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_097</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960-06-28/1960-06-28" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-06-28</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 print, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960723_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Print drawings of 4 houses for Harry Lechtner</p>
        </scopecontent>
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          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Fort Lauderdale Art Museum</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_098</unitid>
          <unitdate encodinganalog="3.1.3">1963</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        3 pencil and colored pencil on trace, 1 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960732_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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          <p>Original drawing of Fort Lauderdale Art Museum</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Fort Lauderdale (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Caraway</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_099</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        7 pencil on trace, 1 print, 1 pencil and ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960742_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
            <name id="atom_960743_actor">W.C. Disbrow Jr. Engineer</name>
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          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of house for H.W. Caraway</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
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      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Harben</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_100</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1960-04-15/1960-04-15" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1960-04-15</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        2 prints, 1 pencil on trace, 4 pencil and ink on trace, 1 ink on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960752_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawing of patio house for Harben Homes, as well as Harben Homes types</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Chasebrook</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_101</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1957-12-10/1957-12-10" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1957-12-10</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        1 print drawing, 15 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960761_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of house types for Chasebrook Co. Inc</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Architecture -- Florida</subject>
          <subject>Architecture, Tropical</subject>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Hollywood (Fla.)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Kohl House</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_102</unitid>
          <unitdate normal="1971-12-25/1971-12-25" encodinganalog="3.1.3">1971-12-25</unitdate>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        5 pencil on trace    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960768_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
          </origination>
        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
        </odd>
        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Original drawings of Kohl House for Jerome and Freika Kohl</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
          <geogname>Raleigh (North Carolina)</geogname>
        </controlaccess>
      </c>
      <c otherlevel="folder" level="otherlevel">
        <did>
          <container type="cabinet" label="filing">15</container>
          <unittitle encodinganalog="3.1.2">Unnamed</unittitle>
          <unitid encodinganalog="3.1.1" countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-FQG">ARC6104_103</unitid>
          <physdesc encodinganalog="3.1.5">
        52 prints, 150 pencil on trace, 8 colored pencil and pencil on trace, 8 pencil and ink on trace, 1 colored pencil and pencil on vellum, 1 colored pencil and pencil on paper, 1 ink on trace, 1 pencil and ink on mylar, 3 print on board    </physdesc>
          <origination encodinganalog="3.2.1">
            <persname id="atom_960774_actor">Reed, Charles, Jr. (Architect)</persname>
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        </did>
        <bioghist id="md5-f4d071668ebcd3d43f979167c96cb4e3" encodinganalog="3.2.2">
          <note>
            <p>Born in 1926, Charles (Chuck) Reed Jr was a Florida architect who worked primarily in the modernist tradition. After serving in World War II, Reed enrolled in the University of Miami School of Architecture. He graduated in the second class of the newly founded school, and went on to practicing architecture. He worked for Igor Polevitzky, a South Florida architect who he greatly admired. His time with Polevitzky became the basis for his architectural foundations, as he learned more in depth about how the design buildings that respond uniquely to the sub-tropical South Florida climate. He began his own practice in the mid-1950's in Hollywood, Florida. While he did not classify his work as belonging to any category or style, his work is classified as mid-century, although he called his work organic and a reinterpretation of residential homes. He explored creative ways to address the South Florida climate and environment with whimsy, as well as being sensitive to the particulars of the landscape. He was always cognizant of hurricane design and was one of the first South Florida architects to implement reinforced masonry construction. He retried in 1997 where he relocated to North Carolina, and he passed in his home in 2022. He left behind a variety of work in South Florida, primarily in Hollywood, Florida.</p>
          </note>
        </bioghist>
        <odd type="publicationStatus">
          <p>Published</p>
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        <scopecontent encodinganalog="3.3.1">
          <p>Print drawings of various unknown projects created by Charles Reed Jr</p>
        </scopecontent>
        <controlaccess>
          <genreform>Architectural drawings (visual works)</genreform>
          <subject>Modernism (Architecture)</subject>
        </controlaccess>
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    </dsc>
  </archdesc>
</ead>
