Finding Aid for the Frederic Lyman papers, 1923-2001 2011.M.31

Ann Harrison
Special Collections
2017
1200 Getty Center Drive, Suite 1100
Los Angeles 90049-1688
Business Number: (310) 440-7390
Fax Number: (310) 440-7780
reference@getty.edu


Contributing Institution: Special Collections
Title: Frederic Lyman papers
Creator: Lyman, Frederic P., III, 1927-2005
Identifier/Call Number: 2011.M.31
Physical Description: 110.5 Linear Feet(21 boxes, 108 flatfile folders, 11 boxed rolls)
Date (inclusive): 1923-2001
Abstract: The Frederic Lyman papers document the career of this southern California architect, who although little known today, was once deemed one of the most talented architects of his generation. Composed of over 1800 drawings and two models, as well as photographs, the archive records Lyman's architectural designs and provides limited glimpses of his other passions of architectural education and social and environmental activism.
Physical Location: Request access to the physical materials described in this inventory through the catalog record  for this collection. Click here for the accesspolicy .
Language of Material: Collection material is in English.

Arrangement

The archive is arranged in two series:
Series I. Architectural projects, 1956-2001;
Series II. Miscellaneous professional and personal papers, circa 1923-1975, undated.

Biographical/Historical Note

Frederic Pomeroy Lyman III was born June 9, 1927 in Kansas City, Missouri. His father, who died suddenly in August 1933, was an architect specializing in French Provincial style residential work, and Lyman remembered being fascinated as a child by the drawings on his father's drafting table. After the death of his father, the family moved to Vancouver, Canada and then to Seattle in 1940.
Lyman was educated at Yale University, receiving his BA in 1950 and a Masters in Architecture in 1953. At this time architectural education at Yale was undergoing transformation. The new chair, George Howe, who had designed the first International style skyscraper built in the United States, encouraged modernism but was not doctrinaire in his approach. He introduced a new curriculum with an integrated course structure. Eugene Nalle, who taught the Basic Design course assisted by Robert Russell, strongly influenced the young Lyman. The focus on tectonics and hands on design with wood and stone learned in Nalle's class would show through clearly in Lyman's later work. Similarly, the emphasis on color and color theory brought to Yale in this period by Josef Albers would find expression in Lyman's renderings. Yet even in school, Lyman was conflicted about an architectural design career. At one point in his studies, Lyman took a leave of absence and briefly studied engineering in New York, before eventually returning and finishing his architecture degree.
After Yale, Lyman returned to Seattle. He worked briefly for a construction company as a carpenter's apprentice and then in 1954 he was hired as a draftsman by the firm of Grant, Copeland and Chervenak, a general practice with a specialization in church design. During his year with the firm, Lyman worked on several projects including apartment buildings, a church, and office remodeling.
In 1955, Lyman moved to Los Angeles and obtained a position with the firm of Neutra and Alexander, then in the later years of their partnership. Working as a draftsman and construction supervisor, Lyman was involved in several of the firm's large institutional and civic projects including the Sydney Opera House Competition, the United States Embassy in Karachi, Los Angeles County Hall of Records and St John's College in Annapolis, Maryland.
By 1957, Lyman was ready to leave Neutra's firm. With three other young architects, Bernard Zimmerman, John Espinosa and David Ming-Li Lowe, Lyman rented space in what had been Rudolph Schindler's drafting room at his King's Road house. Not precisely a firm, the four architects practiced both independently and in sporadic collaboration for the next several years.
Much of Lyman's strongest work was created during this period. Noted collaborations included his work as an associate with Zimmerman on the Altshuler House, and his partnership with Lowe on the partially-realized Park Hill Estates tract. Lyman's first completed independent project, his own home in Malibu, however, was his masterpiece.
While still in Seattle, Lyman had decided to build a house using the principles that he learned from Nalle as a student at Yale. In 1957 he bought a lot in Malibu in Las Flores Canyon for the house he had been designing. Completed in 1960, the minimalist and surprisingly transparent two-story house had essentially two rooms. The ground floor was an open plan living area, with French doors creating 10 foot tall glass walls on the long sides. The second story, accessed by an exterior staircase, served as a sleeping area and studio and had no exterior walls, although a tent-like canvas structure could be used to give some element of protection from the elements and privacy. The bathroom was in a separate adjacent structure.
The Lyman Las Flores House was striking for its explicit tectonics, the way in which it used wood as a medium and its Japanese influence, all outgrowths of Nalle's Basic Design class. The house was conceived as two separate structural units. The exterior framework of massive posts and beams was one independent structure. The living quarters, the "box" as Lyman referred to it, was constructed without nails using dado and mortise and tenon joints, and was then suspended in the framework, attached to the posts by mortise and tenon joints and secured by long peg-like wedges. The heavy timber framework of the house with its modular spacing finds clear aesthetic and technical precedents in Japanese structures like those at the Ise Shrine. The house's handmade joints, more like cabinetry than construction, also echo Japanese carpentry traditions. The house's simplicity, its clarity of form and the relationship of the house to its natural setting also conform to a Japanese aesthetic. For Lyman, this fascination with Japanese architecture had several sources. Lyman had been studying Japanese architecture since Nalle and Russell had introduced him to the work at Yale. He was therefore primed for the broader mid-century trend of Japanese-influenced architecture in the United States, encouraged if not begun by the popularity of the Japanese Exhibition House displayed at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1954 and 1955. Family history may have also played a role as his mother Amalia Partridge Lyman spent much of her childhood in Kyoto, where her father was bishop from 1900 to 1911.
Starting your career with a masterpiece is hard. Although Esther McCoy, the noted architectural critic, early on identified Lyman as one of the leading talents of his generation, little of this promise was fulfilled. By 1963, Lyman had left King's Road and opened an independent office in Sherman Oaks, operating briefly under the name Community Design Associates, and then he soon moved his architectural office out to Malibu. Lyman had a small, steady flow of clients, but very little of this design work was ever realized. Whether Lyman didn't build much because he was distracted by other interests, or he had other interests because he didn't build much is unclear, but in the 1970s design and construction were becoming secondary to Lyman. Other aspects of architecture, such as education and advocacy, and civic and environment activism now engaged Lyman.
Lyman began to consider entering architectural education as early as the 1960s, encouraged by his Yale instructor Robert Russell. By the 1970s, as other young architects were beginning to expand architectural education, as exemplified by the foundation of SCI-Arc in 1972, Lyman's interest became serious. He began searching for an appropriate location to establish a school and eventually settled on a parcel of land near Sebeka, Minnesota, where he felt the varied terrain of rolling hills, woods and lakes would be suitably inspirational. In 1978, Lyman sold the Las Flores house to pay for the property and moved to Minnesota. The Ingham Institute of Environmental Design, named for his stepfather, was meant to spread Lyman's philosophy of "building in harmony with nature." He felt that architects had a responsibility to lead people to live in coexistence with the environment. The school was not as successful as Lyman had hoped. It was an enormous undertaking to establish a school from scratch and there was little student interest. By 1980 he was back in Los Angeles for at least part of the year, and in the following years up to 1993, Lyman worked from both Los Angeles and Minnesota.
Complementing Lyman's interest in architectural education was his dedication to service and advocacy for the profession. Beginning in the early 1970s Lyman served the American Institute of Architecture (AIA) on the national, state and regional levels. He founded and served as the first editor of LA Architect. He expanded this advocacy to the community and to the environment. Lyman became involved with county planning committees, often with political and social issues, for example increasing beach access for all citizens. He was President of the Malibu Township Council and worked to create a national park in the Santa Monica mountains.
The Lyman Las Flores House burned in the Malibu fire of 1993, but it had already been altered beyond recognition by that point. By the mid 1990s Lyman left Los Angeles for New Mexico, basing himself in Taos, where he died on February 28, 2005.
Works Consulted for the Finding Aid
Buckner, Cory. The Lyman House and the Work of Frederic P. Lyman. Los Angeles: Crestwood Hills Press, 2016.
Denzer, Anthony. "No Coincidence: Whitney Smith and Japanese Influences at Midcentury." In Outside In: The Architecture of Smith and Williams, 107-127. Santa Barbara: Art, Design and Architecture Museum, University of California, 2014.
DeWit, Wim. Acquisition Approval Form for Frederic Lyman papers, accession no. 2011.M. 31 July 15, 2010
Drexler, Arthur. The Architecture of Japan. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1955.
"House Floats Inside Itself." Popular Mechanics (September 1965): 126-127.
Mc Coy, Esther, "Young Architects in the United States." Zodiac 8 (1961): 168-186.
Lyman, Frederic. Frederic Lyman papers, 1923-2001. The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no. 2011.M.31.
Rash, David A. "Grant, Copeland, Chervenak & Associates." In Shaping Seattle Architecture, edited by Jeffrey Karl Ochsner, 440-441. Seattle, University of Washington Press, 2nd edition. 2014.
"Sidney Catlin Partridge, B.A. 1880." Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Year 1929-1930, Bulletin of Yale University (1 December 1930): 80-82.
Stern, Robert A. M. and Jimmy Stamp. Pedagogy and Place: 100 Years of Architecture Education at Yale. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016.

Access

Open for use by qualified researchers. For access to architectural models, please contact repository.

Publication Rights

Scope and Content of Collection

The Frederic Lyman papers document the career of this southern California architect, who although little known today, was once deemed one of the most talented architects of his generation. Composed of over 1800 drawings and two models, as well as photographs, the archive records Lyman's architectural designs and provides limited glimpses of his other passions of architectural education and social and environmental activism.
Series I comprises documentation of Lyman's projects as an architect. The forty-eight projects represented in the archive range from Lyman's earliest professional architectural designs to projects from shortly before his death. This archive is not comprehensive however, as many projects listed in Lyman's resume are not found here, and with few exceptions all the correspondence, calculations, press coverage and other such material related to the projects are absent. Lyman's drawings form the core of the series. Over 1800 drawings, both originals and reprographic prints, represent the range of the architectural design process, including preliminary drawings and sketches, working drawings and renderings. Lyman's richly shaded Prismacolor renderings are especially noteworthy and the archive holds over 100 examples of them. For half the projects, photographs in the forms of prints and slides, including work by Marvin Rand, record sites, construction and the finished structure, as well as models and drawings. In addition to these photographs of Lyman's models, the archive contains architectural models for the Lyman Las Flores House and for scheme II of Hood House.
Miscellaneous professional and personal papers constitute Series II. Included here is a small amount of Lyman family material, including prints of a drawing by Lyman's father and family photographs. The bulk of the series, however, is miscellany related to Lyman's architectural education and career. Of particular interest are Lyman's resume and project lists; examples of his student work at Yale, including material for his senior thesis project, a rough-hewn wood and stone dairy barn; and reproductions of Lyman's early work as a draftsman for the firms of Copeland, Grant, Chervenak in Seattle and Neutra and Alexander in Los Angeles.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Katherine Starke Lyman. Acquired in 2011.

Preferred Citation

Frederic Lyman papers, 1923-2001, The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no. 2011.M.31.
http://hdl.handle.net/10020/cifa2011m31

Processing Information

Ann Harrison processed the collection and wrote the finding aid in 2016-2017. Talia Olshefsky assisted with the processing.

Subjects and Indexing Terms

Architect-designed houses -- California
Architects -- California -- Los Angeles
Architecture, Modern -- 20th century -- California, Southern
Architecture -- California -- Los Angeles
Los Angeles (Calif.) -- Buildings, structures, etc. -- 20th century
Architectural drawings -- United States -- 20th century
Architectural models
Gelatin silver prints -- United States -- 20th century
Architecture--United States--Japanese influences
Architects -- Archives

 

Architectural projects, Series I. 1956-2001, undated

Physical Description: 106.3 Linear Feet(20 boxes, 101 flatfile folders, 11 boxed rolls)

Scope and Contents

Documentation of Lyman's projects as an independent architect forms Series I. The forty-eight projects represented in the archive range from early work as Lyman started his own practice to projects begun shortly before his death. The archive is not comprehensive, however, as many projects listed in Lyman's resume are not found here, and with few exceptions all the correspondence, calculations, and press coverage related to the projects is absent. The projects preserved here show the character of Lyman's practice: primarily residential, with a very small number of commercial, civic and institutional projects. Also documented are Lyman's frequent collaborations in the early years of his practice, including work with Bernard Zimmerman, John G. Espinoza, David Ming-Li Lowe and Niels Stoermer.
Lyman's drawings are the core of the series. Over 1800 drawings, both originals and reprographic prints, represent the range of the architectural design process, including preliminary drawings and sketches, working drawings and renderings. Lyman's richly shaded Prismacolor renderings are especially noteworthy and the archive holds over 100 examples of them. For half the projects, photographs in the forms of prints and slides, including work by Marvin Rand, record sites, construction and the finished structure, as well as models and drawings. In addition to these photographs of Lyman's models, the archive contains models for the Lyman House and Hood House.
For each project, a project date and a location are provided in parentheses, when known. The project dates are taken primarily from Lyman's resume and project lists. The date following the parentheses represents the actual creation date of the materials in the archive, and as such may be earlier or later than the project date. Project locations are in California unless otherwise noted. For some Los Angeles area projects, a more precise neighborhood location is also given. For the architectural drawings, the term "standard" refers to drawings 36" x 48" or smaller, with larger drawings indicated as "oversize." For the photographs, the term "standard" refers to prints and negatives 8" x 10" or smaller, with larger items indicated as "oversize."

Arrangement

The projects are arranged in rough chronological order by project date with undated material at the end of the series.
flatfile 1**

Greitzer Duplex (?) (1957, Los Angeles [Hollywood Hills]), undated

flatfile 2**

Schindler House/King's Road Office furniture (1958, West Hollywood), 1958, undated

 

Novak House (1959), undated

Scope and Contents

Photographs of renderings only.
box 3, folder 1

Black-and-white print

box 12, folder 1

Color prints, negative

flatfile 3**, flatfile 4**

Lewinson House (1959, Los Angeles [Crestwood Hills]), 1956, undated

Scope and Contents

One print lists John G. Espinosa as Associate.
 

Altshuler House (1959, Los Angeles [Sherman Oaks]), 1959-1989, undated

Scope and Contents

Bernard Zimmerman, Architect, with Lyman as Associate.
box 3, folder 2

Documentation

flatfile 9**

Drawings

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the model, construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Marvin Rand.
 

Black-and-white prints

box 3, folder 3-7

Standard

box 8, folder 3

Oversize

 

Color prints, negatives

box 12, folder 2

Standard

box 8, folder 4

Oversize

 

Lyman Las Flores House (1960, Malibu), 1956-1997, undated

 

Drawings

flatfile 10**

Topographic and site plans

Scope and Contents

Includes landscaping plan by Donald M. Roberts.
flatfile 11**, flatfile 12**, flatfile 13**, flatfile 14**

Preliminary and working drawings

flatfile 15**, flatfile 16**

Working drawing sets

flatfile 17**, flatfile 18**, flatfile 19**

Sketches on tissue

flatfile 20**

Renderings and detailed elevations

box 10*

Bound set of renderings and working drawings

flatfile 20A**

Mounted rendering

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the model, construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Grant Studios/Grant Photography, Tetsuo Shibata, Rex MacDonald(?), Carol De Marinis, Paul and Annette La Porte and Marvin Rand.
 

Black-and-white prints

box 1, box 2

Standard

box 8, folder 1

Oversize

 

Color prints, Polaroids, transparencies and negatives

box 11

Standard

box 8, folder 2

Oversize

box 31**

Model

 

Finegold Ranch (1960, Fresno), 1959, undated

Scope and Contents

Multiple structures for a summer camp, including Hickman Tower.
 

Drawings

flatfile 5**, flatfile 6**, flatfile 7**, flatfile 8**

Standard

box 20**

Oversize

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the site, construction and a finished structure.
box 3, folder 8

Black-and-white prints

box 12, folder 3

Color prints, negatives

 

Mankiewicz House (1960, Los Angeles), 1960-1961, undated

flatfile 21**, flatfile 22**

Drawings

flatfile 23**, flatfile 24**, flatfile 25**, flatfile 26**, flatfile 27**

Presentation boards

Scope and Contents

Varying schemes with original renderings, photographs of renderings and prints of drawings.
 

Photographs of drawings

box 3, folder 9

Black-and-white prints, photostats

box 12, folder 4

Color prints, Polaroids, negatives

flatfile 29**

Mindess House alterations and addition (1961), undated

 

Park Hill Estates (1961, Riverside), undated

Scope and Contents

With David Ming-Li Lowe; tract also called Park View Estates on the drawings.
 

Drawings

box 9*

Set with tract map, sample plans and renderings

Scope and Contents

Spiral bound reduced-scale prints.
flatfile 30**, flatfile 31**, flatfile 32**, flatfile 33**

Mounted renderings

flatfile 28**

Presentation board

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of construction and completed model homes.
box 3, folder 10

Black-and-white prints

 

Color prints, transparencies, negatives

box 12, folder 5

Standard

box 8, folder 5

Oversize

 

Jacobs House alterations (1962, Los Angeles [Cheviot Hills]), 1962, undated

Scope and Contents

With David Ming-Li Lowe.
flatfile 34**

Drawings

box 3, folder 11

Structural calculations

flatfile 35**

O'Neal House alterations and additions (1962), undated

 

Dougherty House (1962), undated

flatfile 35A**

Rendering

box 12, folder 8

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Color prints of rendering and black-and-white print of plan.
flatfile 38**

British Motor Car Garage (1962), undated

 

San Gabriel Valley Tribune Printing Plant (1963, West Covina), 1965, undated

Scope and Contents

Lyman's firm listed as Community Design Associates on drawings; in association with Dickenson & Cain, Cleveland.
flatfile 39**, flatfile 40**

Drawings

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the model, construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Marvin Rand and Fred Welch.
box 4, folder 1-3

Black-and-white prints

box 13, folder 2

Color prints, negatives

flatfile 85**

Unidentified residential project (circa 1963) undated

Scope and Contents

Lyman's firm listed as Community Design Associates on drawing.
 

Starr House (1964, Los Angeles [Mandeville Canyon]), 1960, 1963, undated

flatfile 36**, flatfile 37**

Drawings

Scope and Contents

Includes 1960 plan for the lot by D. Wallace Benton and Donald Park. Also includes plan/rendering for different house/site; for same client(?)
box 12, folder 9

Photographs

 

Press-Courier Building, alterations and additions to printing plant (1964, Oxnard), 1964, undated

Scope and Contents

Stoermer-Lyman & Associates.
flatfile 41**

Drawings

 

Photographs

box 4, folder 4

Black-and-white print

box 12, folder 6

Color prints

box 4, folder 4

Clipping

 

Micheletti House (1964, Malibu), 1965, undated

Scope and Contents

Lyman's firm listed as Community Design Associates on drawings.
flatfile 42**, flatfile 43**

Drawings

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Marvin Rand, Tom Russo and Carol De Marinis.
box 4, folder 5-7

Black-and-white prints

 

Color prints, transparencies, negatives

box 12, folder 7

Standard

box 8, folder 6

Oversize

 

Malibu Monorail (1964, Malibu), undated

flatfile 45**

Renderings

Scope and Contents

One rendering used as announcement for office move to the Las Flores House.
box 13, folder 1

Color photographs of renderings

 

Hood House (1965, Wisconsin) 1964-1970, undated

 

Drawings

box 21**

Topographic and siting plans

 

Preliminary drawings, elevations, details

flatfile 46**, flatfile 47**, flatfile 48**

Standard

box 22**, box 23**, box 24**

Oversize

 

Working drawings

flatfile 49**

Standard

box 25**, box 26**

Oversize

flatfile 50**

Decision making and completion charts

flatfile 51**

Tissue sketches

flatfile 52**

Renderings

box 27**

Furnishing plans

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the site, models, and a visit to the Lyman house by the Hoods in 1968, including photographs made by Tom Russo.
box 5, folder 1-10

Black-and-white prints

box 14, box 15

Color prints, Polaroids, slides, negatives

box 32**

Model: Scheme II

 

Ingham Pool (1967, Seattle, Washington), 1968, undated

 

Drawings

flatfile 44**

Standard

box 28**

Oversize

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Marvin Rand and Gene Harmon.
box 5, folder 11

Black-and-white prints

 

Color prints, slides, transparencies, negatives

box 16, folder 1

Standard

box 8, folder 7

Oversize

 

Thompson House (1968, Malibu), 1968, undated

box 5, folder 12

Specifications

flatfile 53**, flatfile 54**, flatfile 55**

Drawings

box 16, folder 2

Photographs of drawings

flatfile 56**

Gerritsen House (1968, Malibu), 1968, undated

Scope and Contents

Includes scheme by David Ming-Li Lowe. Some drawings marked as "plaintiff's exhibit."
 

Maslon House remodel (1969, Cathedral City), 1969, undated

 

Drawings

flatfile 57**, flatfile 58**

Standard

box 29**

Oversize

box 16, folder 3

Photographs

 

Jensen House (1970), 1970, undated

flatfile 59**

Drawings

box 16, folder 4

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Black-and-white Polaroids of model and color prints of party at house.
 

Lyman Speculative House (1971, Malibu), 1971, undated

 

Drawings

flatfile 66**

Standard

box 30**

Oversize

box 16, folder 5

Photographs of model

 

Ingham Houseboat (1971, Seattle, Washington), 1971-1972, undated

Scope and Contents

Includes schemes by Gerry J. Copeland.
box 5, folder 13

Documentation

Scope and Contents

Includes decision making charts and small sketches and drawings.
flatfile 60**, flatfile 61**, flatfile 62**, flatfile 63**, flatfile 64**, flatfile 65**

Drawings

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the model and drawings.
box 5, folder 14

Black-and-white prints

box 16, folder 6

Color prints

flatfile 67**

Abbot House (1972), 1972

flatfile 70**

Seattle Museum of Art, Entrance Ramp (1972, Seattle, Washington), 1972

 

Howard Veterinary Laboratory (1972, Brawley, California), 1972-1973, undated

flatfile 68**, flatfile 68A**

Drawings

Scope and Contents

Includes drawings signed Stevenson/Sanders for a residential addition for James Howard.
 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the model, site, construction and the finished structure, including photographs made by Marvin Rand.
box 6, folder 1-4

Black-and-white prints

 

Color prints, Polaroids, negatives

box 17, folder 1

Standard

box 8, folder 8

Oversize

box 18, folder 1

Slides

flatfile 69**

Pratt House alterations and additions (1973), 1973, undated

 

Blau House (1974, Malibu), 1974, 1977, undated

Physical Description: 43 drawing(s)
flatfile 71**

Drawings

box 6, folder 5

Photographs of site

flatfile 72**

Lyman House extension (1975, Malibu), 1959, 1975, 1977, undated

flatfile 74**

Guthman House alterations and additions (1975, Los Angeles [Pacific Palisades]), 1975

 

Cooper Trellis (1975), 1975, undated

flatfile 73**

Drawings

 

Photographs

Scope and Contents

Photographs of the site, construction and the finished structure. Also includes photographs of a model of an outdoor fireplace(?).
box 6, folder 6

Black-and-white prints

box 16, folder 7

Color prints and negatives

flatfile 75**, flatfile 76**

Gourrich House addition (1976, Beverly Hills), 1976-1977, undated

flatfile 77**

Weber House (1977), 1977

flatfile 78**

Jensen House remodel (1977), 1977, undated

flatfile 79**, flatfile 80**

Aronson House (1977, Malibu), 1977, undated

 

Hooker House (1977, Malibu), 1960, 1977-1978, undated

flatfile 81**, flatfile 82**, flatfile 83**

Drawings

box 18, folder 2

Slides

 

Deerhill House (1981, Topanga), 1981, undated

flatfile 84**

Drawings

box 16, folder 8

Photographs and transparency of rendering

flatfile 90**

Sebeka Library (Sebeka, Minnesota), 1993-1998

flatfile 91**

Katherine S. Lyman Studio (Taos, New Mexico), 1996-2001

flatfile 86**, flatfile 87**, flatfile 88**

Ingham Institute of Environmental Design (1998-2000, Sebeka, Minnesota), 1969, 1988, 1998-2000, undated

flatfile 94**

Ingham Trellis (Seattle, Washington), undated

flatfile 92**

Billings House , undated

flatfile 93**

Wood House , undated

 

Fantasy and unidentified projects, undated

flatfile 95**, flatfile 96**

Drawings

box 18, folder 3

Photographs

box 19, folder 1

Mixed negative rolls, undated

 

Miscellaneous professional and personal papers, Series II. circa 1923-1975, undated

Physical Description: 4.2 Linear Feet(1 box, 8 flatfile folders)

Scope and Contents

Series II comprises miscellaneous personal and professional material. Various materials, including Lyman's resume and project lists; examples of his student work from Yale, including material relating to his senior thesis, a rough-hewn wood and stone dairy barn; and reproductions of Lyman's early work as a draftsman for the firms of Copeland, Grant, Chervenak in Seattle and Neutra and Alexander, form the bulk of the series. Also included are a small number of family-related papers.

Arrangement

The series is arranged by type of material.
box 7, folder 1

Resume and project lists, circa 1970-1975

 

Student work, 1950-1953

Scope and Contents

Includes class assignments and materials related to Lyman's thesis project.
flatfile 99**, flatfile 100**, flatfile 101**, flatfile 102**

Drawings

box 7, folder 2

Photographs and photostats of drawings, models and site

 

Early work for other firms, 1954-1957

flatfile 97**

Work for Copeland, Grant, Chervenak, Seattle, 1954-1955

Scope and Contents

Portfolio of prints of working drawings, most signed by Lyman, for three apartment buildings, includes title page with photographs.
box 7, folder 3

Work for Neutra and Alexander, Los Angeles, 1955-1957

Scope and Contents

Includes photographs of St. John's College campus, with photographs made by Joseph W. Molitor and Julius Shulman, and photographs of renderings for unidentified projects.
 

Materials related to Lyman's work with the Los Angeles chapter of the AIA, 1982, undated

box 7, folder 4

Papers, undated

Scope and Contents

Includes letterhead envelope and photograph of Kamnitzer and Cotton(?) project model.
box 8, folder 9

"Concepts," 1982

Scope and Contents

Article published in LA Architect.
flatfile 104**

360° perspective charts, undated

flatfile 103**

Charts of ratios of national birthrates to per capita incomes after 1970, after 1992

box 7, folder 5

Portraits of Lyman, 1971, undated

Scope and Contents

Photographs by Cory Buckner and Wayne Wilcox.
 

Family documents, circa 1923-1933, undated

flatfile 98**

Prints of architectural drawing by Frederic P. Lyman II, circa 1923-1933

box 19, folder 2

Family photographs, undated

Scope and Contents

Includes negatives of house of Agnes Partridge, Lyman's maternal grandmother; negatives of young Lyman with friends at Yale (?).