flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Gyo Obata, FAIA, HOK Founding Partner, passes away at 99

Architects

Gyo Obata, FAIA, HOK Founding Partner, passes away at 99

Obata's career spanned six decades and included iconic projects like the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., and Community of Christ Temple in Independence, Mo. 


By HOK and BD+C | March 10, 2022
Gyo Obata, FAIA, HOK Founding Partner, passes away at 99
“Gyo’s extraordinary career at HOK continued into his 90s, and he served as a mentor to several generations of designers including myself,” said HOK Chairman and CEO Bill Hellmuth, FAIA. Photo courtesy HOK

Gyo Obata, FAIA, architect and Founding Partner of HOK, passed away on March 8. He was 99. 

Obata, in partnership with George F. Hellmuth and George Kassabaum, built HOK from a regional, St. Louis-based architectural practice into a global design, architecture, engineering, and planning firm.

His career spanned six decades and included numerous iconic projects, including:

  • Priory Chapel at Saint Louis Abbey, Creve Coeur, Mo. (1962)
  • The Galleria in Houston (1970)
  • Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (1973)
  • Bristol-Myers Squibb Campus, Princeton, N.J.(1973)
  • National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. (1976)
  • King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1983)
  • King Saud University in Riyadh (1984)
  • Community of Christ Temple, Independence, Mo. (1994)
  • Japanese American National Museum Pavilion in Los Angeles (1998)


Statement from HOK:

Gyo was one of three principals who built HOK from a regional, St. Louis-based architectural practice into one of the world’s most respected global design, architecture, engineering and planning firms. His distinguished career spanned six decades. From the time of his retirement in 2012 and continuing into 2018, Gyo maintained an office in HOK’s St. Louis studio, where he regularly served as a design advisor to his colleagues.

“Gyo’s extraordinary career at HOK continued into his 90s, and he served as a mentor to several generations of designers including myself,” said HOK Chairman and CEO Bill Hellmuth, FAIA. “As an example to all of us, he led HOK to become the largest architecture-engineering firm in the United States while never abdicating his role as a designer of significant projects.”

Underpinning Gyo’s pioneering design approach was a fundamental belief that each project must be approached without preconceptions and designed to serve the needs, values and aspirations of the people and community it serves. Rather than imposing his will upon a project, Gyo paid close attention to the needs expressed by clients and then let the project guide the design of a building that would bring meaning and enjoyment to its visitors and inhabitants.

Gyo Obata, FAIA, HOK Founding Partner, passes away at 99
Photos courtesy HOK

“Gyo embodied everything that’s honorable about the architectural profession,” said Bill Valentine, FAIA, HOK’s chairman emeritus. “Instead of designing for the fashions of the times or to make a personal statement, Gyo designed to improve lives. He was a kind, thoughtful man who developed warm, personal relationships with his colleagues and clients. People believed in him, which is an essential part of turning drawings into buildings.”

A strong proponent of sustainable design, Gyo’s work is characterized by an efficient use of materials and sense of harmony with its natural environment. “If you see architecture as a conversation with the surrounding environment, then Gyo is the ideal conversationalist,” wrote George McCue in a 1983 cover story on Gyo for St. Louis Magazine. “The greatest virtue his buildings possess is the great ‘courtesy’ they display toward their environment.”

Gyo was an advocate for a holistic approach to design in which architecture, engineering, interior design, planning and landscape architecture are fully integrated and delivered by a single multidisciplinary design team. This approach helped drive HOK’s ongoing expansion into new specialty practices, market sectors and geographic regions.

During his 50-year tenure as HOK’s design principal, Gyo shaped iconic, award-winning projects around the world. A few noteworthy examples include the Priory Chapel at Saint Louis Abbey, Creve Coeur, Missouri (1962); The Galleria in Houston (1970); Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (1973); Bristol-Myers Squibb Campus, Princeton, New Jersey (1973); National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. (1976); King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1983); King Saud University in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1984); Community of Christ Temple, Independence, Missouri (1994); and the Japanese American National Museum Pavilion in Los Angeles (1998).

King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1983) by Gyo Obata, HOK
King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (1983) by Gyo Obata, HOK. Photo courtesy HOK

With an approach to life that regarded each day as a portal to possibility, Gyo also loved spending time with his family and friends, gardening, tennis, art, travel, reading, his dogs, birds, music, theater, opera, films and cooking.

Gyo Obata's Life of Design

Gyo was born in San Francisco in 1923. His parents, both artists from Japan, met in San Francisco after emigrating to the U.S. His father, Chiura Obata, introduced the classical sumi-e style of painting to the U.S. West Coast, and his mother, Haruko Obata, did the same for ikebana, the Japanese art of flower arranging. “Our house was like a studio, and was always filled with paintings and flowers,” said Gyo in the 2010 book by Marlene Ann Birkman: Gyo Obata: Architect | Clients | Reflections. “My parents were both great teachers and taught me life’s most basic lesson: to listen very carefully.”

Gyo was 18 when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and an anti-Japanese hysteria swept the United States. He enrolled in the architectural program at the University of California, Berkeley in 1942, but his education was interrupted during his freshman year by the internment of approximately 117,000 people of Japanese ancestry in the U.S. The night before his parents, brother and sister were relocated to an internment camp in Northern California, Gyo boarded a train to St. Louis to continue his architectural training at Washington University, which at the time was one of the only U.S. universities that would accept Japanese-American students. His father had secured special permission from the local provost marshal for him to leave the region.

Professor Obata and Family_L to R_Gyo, Sister Yuri, Haruko and Chiura Obata_Credit HOK.jpg
Gyo with this sister, Yuri, and his parents, Haruko and Chiura Obata. Photo courtesy HOK

He earned a Bachelor of Science in Architecture from Washington University in 1945 before continuing his architectural education at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan. There he studied under master Finnish architect Eliel Saarinen, the father of Eero Saarinen, architect of the iconic Gateway Arch in St. Louis. In 1946, Gyo received a Master of Architecture and Urban Design.

“Saarinen’s teachings had an enormous positive influence on me,” said Gyo in a 2006 interview.  “He emphasized the relationship of every element in a design and the importance of integrating them, from the smallest through the largest. Since then, I have always been interested in working on large-scale projects where many smaller parts must fit within the greater whole.”

After serving with the U.S. Army in the Aleutian Islands off the coast of Alaska, Gyo joined the Chicago office of architecture firm Skidmore, Owings & Merrill in 1947 as a designer.

Community of Christ Temple, Independence, Mo. (1994)
Community of Christ Temple, Independence, Mo. (1994) by Gyo Obata, HOK. Photo courtesy HOK

In 1951, the St. Louis architecture firm Hellmuth, Yamasaki & Leinweber (HYL) recruited him as a design assistant to Minoru Yamasaki, an architect who would later design the World Trade Center in New York City. Gyo’s collaborations with Yamasaki included the design of the signature passenger terminal at St. Louis Lambert International Airport that opened in 1956. Credited for helping change the visual vocabulary of airports and being the forerunner of modern airport terminals, the building features aerodynamic lines and a series of low-slung arches that celebrate the concept of flight.

When HYL reorganized in 1955 as Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum (HOK), Gyo, at the age of 32, was appointed principal of design. Together with George Hellmuth (1907-1999), who led marketing and business development, and George Kassabaum (1921-1982), who oversaw production, the partners pioneered a tripartite business model that would come to define the modern multidisciplinary architecture practice.

Tags

Related Stories

| Jan 4, 2011

California buildings: now even more efficient

New buildings in California must now be more sustainable under the state’s Green Building Standards Code, which took effect with the new year. CALGreen, the first statewide green building code in the country, requires new buildings to be more energy efficient, use less water, and emit fewer pollutants, among many other requirements. And they have the potential to affect LEED ratings.

| Jan 4, 2011

New Years resolutions for architects, urban planners, and real estate developers

Roger K. Lewis, an architect and a professor emeritus of architecture at the University of Maryland, writes in the Washington Post about New Years resolutions he proposes for anyone involved in influencing buildings and cities. Among his proposals: recycle and reuse aging or obsolete buildings instead of demolishing them; amend or eliminate out-of-date, obstructive, and overly complex zoning ordinances; and make all city and suburban streets safe for cyclists and pedestrians.

| Jan 4, 2011

An official bargain, White House loses $79 million in property value

One of the most famous office buildings in the world—and the official the residence of the President of the United States—is now worth only $251.6 million. At the top of the housing boom, the 132-room complex was valued at $331.5 million (still sounds like a bargain), according to Zillow, the online real estate marketplace. That reflects a decline in property value of about 24%.

| Jan 4, 2011

Luxury hotel planned for Palace of Versailles

Want to spend the night at the Palace of Versailles? The Hotel du Grand Controle, a 1680s mansion built on palace grounds for the king's treasurer and vacant since the French Revolution, will soon be turned into a luxury hotel. Versailles is partnering with Belgian hotel company Ivy International to restore the dilapidated estate into a 23-room luxury hotel. Guests can live like a king or queen for a while—and keep their heads.

| Jan 4, 2011

Grubb & Ellis predicts commercial real estate recovery

Grubb & Ellis Company, a leading real estate services and investment firm, released its 2011 Real Estate Forecast, which foresees the start of a slow recovery in the leasing market for all property types in the coming year.

| Jan 4, 2011

Furniture Sustainability Standard - Approved by ANSI and Released for Distribution

BIFMA International recently announced formal American National Standards Institute (ANSI) approval and release of the ANSI/BIFMA e3-2010 Furniture Sustainability Standard. The e3 standard represents a structured methodology to evaluate the "sustainable" attributes of furniture products and constitutes the technical criteria of the level product certification program.

| Jan 3, 2011

Chicago Architectural Foundation’s media expert takes all 85 tours in one year

Jennifer Lucente, the social media expert at the Chicago Architecture Foundation has completed her year of taking tours—taking all 85 tours in 2010. The challenge that began last January with a tour of the Board of Trade building has ended today with the architecture foundation’s newest tour:  Razzle Dazzle – featuring the Loop theater district followed by a celebration at the Chicago Theatre.

| Dec 28, 2010

Project of the Week: Community college for next-gen Homeland Security personnel

The College of DuPage, Glen Ellyn, Ill., began work on the Homeland Security Education Center, which will prepare future emergency personnel to tackle terrorist attacks and disasters. The $25 million, 61,100-sf building’s centerpiece will be an immersive interior street lab for urban response simulations.

| Dec 20, 2010

Architect Adrian D. Smith on zero-energy cities, new technologies, and high density.

Adrian D. Smith, FAIA, RIBA, is co-founder (with Gordon Gill) of Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill Architecture, Chicago. Previously, he was a design partner in the Chicago office of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (1980-2003) and a consulting design partner from 2004 to 2006. His landmark structures include the Jin Mao Tower (Shanghai), Rowes Wharf (Boston), and Burj Khalifa (Dubai, U.A.E.), the world’s tallest structure. He recently collaborated with Gordon Gill to design the world’s first net-zero-energy skyscraper, Pearl River Tower, now nearing completion in Guangzhou, China. This account is based on his recent remarks at the Illinois Institute of Technology.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Great Solutions

41 Great Solutions for architects, engineers, and contractors

AI ChatBots, ambient computing, floating MRIs, low-carbon cement, sunshine on demand, next-generation top-down construction. These and 35 other innovations make up our 2024 Great Solutions Report, which highlights fresh ideas and innovations from leading architecture, engineering, and construction firms.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021