One of the most daring structures of its time in Maine was a wing called the Pavilion, which was added to Blue Hill\u27s 1842 Stevens building and designed by Cooper Milliken in the 1940s. The Pavilion, run by partners Lynn Thompson and Dorothy Heywood, became the unofficial first outpost of Design Research in Cambridge, Mass., a store that brought modern design to America. The building was shuttered in the 60s, and in 1967 was demolished by its new owner, an insurance agent who deemed the design too New York
A spring or summer view of the West Pavilion that includes the Director\u27s quarters. This was take...
Aerial view showing the 1956 (MMC) pavilion to the right of center, nearly completed. Buildings show...
Maine architect James Schildroth, who was named a Taliesin Fellow at the world center for Frank Lloy...
Inside Story piece on the transformation of an old shed on an island in Penobscot Bay into a guest ...
A view of the Charles St. side of 1929 pavilion with vehicles. The reverse has Pavilion North West ...
Exterior view of the Tate House, 1267 Westbrook Street, from northeast. Built in 1755, The house wa...
This image shows the steel framing for the MMC Pavilion (Pavilion C & D) with Bramhall Street in the...
The late nineteenth-century summer colony at Little Harbor in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, was centere...
In the late 1920s, inventor Buckminster Fuller believed Maine islands would become sites for his fir...
Description of Maine\u27s pavilion at Expo 67 in Montrealhttps://digitalmaine.com/expo67_news/1002/t...
Full, exterior view of the Portland School of Fine and Applied Art (later, Portland School of Art, a...
Hotel Champernowne, Kittery Point, Maine, built in 1890 by Horace Mitchell. The four pictures show a...
Full exterior view of the Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary, 79 Bramhall Street (794-800 Congress Street) ...
This aerial view shows the framing for the Richards Wing which opened in 1969. At the start of the c...
An article on new architecture in Maine, which derives mainly from the Cape Cod and Colonial traditi...
A spring or summer view of the West Pavilion that includes the Director\u27s quarters. This was take...
Aerial view showing the 1956 (MMC) pavilion to the right of center, nearly completed. Buildings show...
Maine architect James Schildroth, who was named a Taliesin Fellow at the world center for Frank Lloy...
Inside Story piece on the transformation of an old shed on an island in Penobscot Bay into a guest ...
A view of the Charles St. side of 1929 pavilion with vehicles. The reverse has Pavilion North West ...
Exterior view of the Tate House, 1267 Westbrook Street, from northeast. Built in 1755, The house wa...
This image shows the steel framing for the MMC Pavilion (Pavilion C & D) with Bramhall Street in the...
The late nineteenth-century summer colony at Little Harbor in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, was centere...
In the late 1920s, inventor Buckminster Fuller believed Maine islands would become sites for his fir...
Description of Maine\u27s pavilion at Expo 67 in Montrealhttps://digitalmaine.com/expo67_news/1002/t...
Full, exterior view of the Portland School of Fine and Applied Art (later, Portland School of Art, a...
Hotel Champernowne, Kittery Point, Maine, built in 1890 by Horace Mitchell. The four pictures show a...
Full exterior view of the Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary, 79 Bramhall Street (794-800 Congress Street) ...
This aerial view shows the framing for the Richards Wing which opened in 1969. At the start of the c...
An article on new architecture in Maine, which derives mainly from the Cape Cod and Colonial traditi...
A spring or summer view of the West Pavilion that includes the Director\u27s quarters. This was take...
Aerial view showing the 1956 (MMC) pavilion to the right of center, nearly completed. Buildings show...
Maine architect James Schildroth, who was named a Taliesin Fellow at the world center for Frank Lloy...