(b New York, May 23, 1939). American architect, writer, and teacher. He studied at Columbia University, New York (BA 1960), and Yale University, New Haven, CT (March 1965), and worked for Richard Meier in New York (1966) and for several city programmes on urban design (1966–70). He was in partnership (1969–77) with John S. Hagmann and established his own practice in 1977. His work as an architect can be divided into three distinct themes: the earliest, from the Wiseman house (1965–7), Montauk, NY, to the pool-house (1973–4), Greenwich, CT, explored complex spatial formalism, mostly in an abstracted Shingle style. The second, from the Lang house (1973–4), Washington, CT, to the Point West Place office building (1983–5), Framingham, CT, developed a Post-modernism of ironic historical allusion and exuberant symbolism that drew principally on the classical tradition. The third theme centred on a more scholarly revival of styles, such as Spanish Colonial in Prospect Point (...