Paul H. Kirk

Fellow | AIA

Born in Salt Lake City in 1914, Paul Hayden Kirk arrived in Seattle at the age of eight and graduated from Roosevelt High School in 1932. After receiving his architecture degree from the University of Washington in 1937, he worked for a variety of architects including Floyd Naramore, A.M. Young, B. Dudley Stuart, and Henry Bittman. Kirk then started his own practice in 1939 and began designing homes for his older brother, Blair Kirk, a building contractor.

His early tendencies were towards simplified forms and these details emerged in Kirk’s early design for a speculative housing development on Columbia Ridge where limited materials and budget necessitated a more functional solution.

During World War II, Kirk joined forces with other architects to take advantage of war contracts, including partnering with former employer B. Dudley Stuart and Robert Durham. After the war, in 1944, Kirk established a partnership with architect James J. Chiarelli. The firm of Chiarelli & Kirk produced a variety of Modernist structures such as the Crown Hill Medical-Dental Clinic in Seattle (1947), the Dr. Schueler House (1947) in Port Angeles, a variety of buildings at Camp Nor’wester (1946-1962) on Lopez Island, the Lakewood Community Church (1949), and homes in Bellevue’s Norwood Village (1951).

From 1950 to 1957, Kirk worked again as sole practitioner. During this time, his designs for single family residences displayed characteristics of the International style with flat roofs, bands of windows, and simple cubic shapes. Noteworthy examples include the Lewis Dowell House (1954) in Seattle, the George Tavernites House (1952) in Seattle, and the Lake City Clinic (1952). Eventually, Kirk dismissed the International style “as an architecture which has been imposed on the land by man.”

During the 1950s his projects increasingly displayed complex structural detailing, often with exposed layers of wood framing. This is visible at the Group Health Cooperative Northgate Clinic (1958), the Blakeley Clinic (1957), and the University Unitarian Church (1959).

Many of Kirk’s residential projects during this time also gained national attention. Among them was the Frank Gilbert House (1957) in the Highlands, the Bowman House (1956) in Kirkland, and the Evans House (1956) on Mercer Island. In 1957, several of his projects were selected by a jury for House & Garden magazine, with  four of five designs receiving national design awards. Other work was featured in Sunset Magazine and McCall’s Book of Modern Houses.

As accolades came in, business increased. In 1957, he established Paul Hayden Kirk & Associates. Three years later, after promoting Donald S. Wallace and David A. McKinley to partnership level, the firm was reorganized and renamed: Kirk, Wallace, McKinley & Associates. Projects from this period included the Magnolia Library (1963), the Japanese Presbyterian Church (1963), Jefferson Terrace (1966), the French Administration Building at Washington State University (1967), Edmond Meany Hall at University of Washington (1974), the IBM Office Building (1965) in Spokane, and the Alexander Graham Bell Elementary School (1967) in Kirkland.

Over the course of his career, Kirk’s work was widely published. Between 1945 and 1970, his designs were included in over sixty articles in various national architectural publications. His work was respected both locally and nationally, which led to Kirk’s election as a fellow of the AIA in 1959.

He was also active in a variety of civic affairs in Seattle. Throughout his career he served as a frequent juror of professional design competitions. He was appointed to the City of Seattle Housing Board; served as president of the Seattle Art Museum’s Contemporary Arts Council; served as president of the AIA; and was a trustee on the boards of the Arboretum Foundation and the Bloedel Reserve. With architect John Morse, he authored a plan to purchase and rehabilitate buildings in the Pike Place Market as a City facility in 1969, a step that led to the Market’s eventual preservation.

Paul Hayden Kirk retired from practice and transferred his firm to partner David McKinley in 1979. He passed away in Kirkland on May 22, 1995.

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