Descriptive Summary
Access
Publication Rights
Preferred Citation
Acquisition Information
Biography/Administrative History
Scope and Content of Collection
Indexing Terms
Additional collection guides
Descriptive Summary
Title: Richard J. Neutra and Otto Winkler project records
Dates: 1934-1950
Collection Number: SFH 554
Creator/Collector:
Winkler, Otto, 1897-1993
Extent: 1 document box and 1 oversize folder
Repository:
San Francisco Public Library. San Francisco History Center
San Francisco, California 94102
Abstract: Contracts, specifications and drawings from a San Francisco architecture firm
Language of Material: English
Access
The collection is available for use during San Francisco History Center hours, with photographs available during Photo Desk
hours. Collections that are stored offsite should be requested 48 hours in advance.
Publication Rights
All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the City Archivist. Permission
for publication is given on behalf of the San Francisco Public Library as the owner of the physical items.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item]. Richard J. Neutra and Otto Winkler project records. Collection Number: SFH 554. San Francisco Public
Library. San Francisco History Center
Acquisition Information
Gift, 2019-11
Biography/Administrative History
Richard Neutra was born in Austria and is chiefly known for introducing the International Style in architecture to the United
States. He worked with architect Otto Winkler on a dozen residences in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1930s. Neutra had
a studio at 251 Kearny Street, San Francisco from 1935-1940, and Winkler shared that studio in 1939.
Otto Winkler was born in Zurich and came to San Francisco. He married Mary E. Lafler in 1931, and the couple lived at her
property on Telegraph Hill. In 1934, Winkler and Neutra were sharing a studio there at 1441 Montgomery St. Mary divorced Otto
in 1936, but Winkler later designed apartments for the Lafler property. Mary Winkler died in Burlingame in 1976, and Otto
Winkler died in New York City in 1993.
Scope and Content of Collection
This small collection includes Neutra and Winkler’s design drawings submitted to the San Francisco Bridge Celebration competition,
1934, for a site in the South Basin, San Francisco; the Celebration would evolve into the Golden Gate International Exposition.
The collection also includes Neutra’s contracts for the Largent, Jones, and Schiff residences in San Francisco; specifications
for the Largent residence; and Neutra and Winkler’s specifications for residences in San Francisco, Berkeley, Lafayette, San
Jose, Davis, Los Altos, Nicasio, Monterey, and Elk, California. A few typescripts for published articles relating to Neutra’s
work with the Los Angeles school district are included, and there are two folders of photographs of plans and models, of finished
projects, and of interiors, including the Kaufman house. Various checklists, a few pieces of correspondence, and ephemera
are included. Neutra was western regional architectural consultant for the National Youth Administration (NYA) in 1939, a
program for unemployed youth, and one folder includes bluelines of drawings completed by youth workers in the NYA Statewide
Drafting Area #7 California, circa 1939-1941.
Indexing Terms
Exhibitions – California – San Francisco – Planning.
Architecture, Domestic – California – San Francisco.
Modern movement (Architecture)
Buildings – Specifications.
Architectural contracts.
Architects -- California -- San Francisco.
Neutra, Richard Joseph, 1892-1970 – Archives.
Kaufman, Edward, 1893-1955 -- Homes and haunts.
United States. National Youth Administration. State of California
San Francisco (Calif.) – Buildings, structures, etc.
Architectural drawings
Additional collection guides