( Anthony ) (b Budapest, Oct 2, 1898; d New Rochelle, NY, April 22, 1970). American architect of Hungarian birth. He is best known as a designer of dams for the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), where he tried ‘to make sure that the dams look as efficient as the engineers have made them’. Throughout his career he combined an understanding of technical requirements with strong artistic sensibilities. Educated at the Fine Arts Academy, Budapest, and the Royal Technical University of Budapest, he graduated in 1922 from the Technical University of Brno, Moravia (now in Czech Republic) and designed industrial projects before emigrating to the USA in 1924. Between 1927 and 1933 he worked in New York, designing the Grand Street cooperative housing (1929) for the firm of Springsteen & Goldhammer, the Union Station (1931) in Cincinnati, OH, and the passenger railway station (1932) in Hamilton, Ont., for Fellheimer & Wagner. As Chief Architect for the TVA from 1933 to 1944...