Background
Ernest was born in San Francisco, Esther in Palo Alto, and they married in 1926 after meeting at University of California Berkeley’s architecture school.
Ernest was born in San Francisco, Esther in Palo Alto, and they married in 1926 after meeting at University of California Berkeley’s architecture school.
Born studied architecture at the University of California, Berkeley, graduating from the school of Architecture in 1922.
She was also a notable architectural photographer. After graduation he traveled to Europe on a Guggenheim Fellowship, then returned to University of California Berkeley earning a master"s degree in 1923, with a thesis on the relation of painting to architecture. He worked for prominent San Francisco architects such as John Reid Junior., John Galen Howard and George Kelham between 1923 and 1928.
The couple relocated to New York’s Greenwich Village in 1929.
Esther took a job with Wallace K. Harrison, the architect overseeing the creation of Rockefeller Center. Ernest spent time as a draftsman at Shreve, Lamb and Harmon, the firm best known for the Empire State Building.
In 1931 he opened his own architectural practice, working on a wide variety of projects ranging from designing commercial spaces and exhibitions to architectural advertising. He served on the editorial staff of Architectural Record from 1933-1934 and Architectural Forum from 1935-1936.
He received his license to practice architecture in New York in 1931, and in California in 1937.
He was later a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects ( Fellow of the American Institute of Architects). They returned to San Francisco in 1937 and went into business together, working residential, commercial and industrial projects, exhibitions, and photography. The Borns exhibited and promoted the then new Second Bay Tradition (1928−1942), and were part of the Third Bay Tradition (1945−1980s) of Modernist architecture and design.
His mural paintings for the Golden Gate International Exposition established his reputation as an artist.
His drawings for a proposed United Nations Center, with William Wurster and Theodore Bernardi, were exhibited in San Francisco and New York museums. During the war years, Born worked with architect Gardner Dailey on special military projects in Brazil and in the United States.
Their designed the "Ernest and Esther Born House" for themselves, a Modernist residence located at 2020 Great Highway in western San Francisco.
Born designed North Beach Place in 1951, a public housing project at the cable car turntable on Taylor Street. lieutenant was demolished in 2001.
The Borns’ 1958 vision for “Embarcadero City” for the San Francisco Portuguese Authority.
The master plan for the waterfront from the Ferry Building to Aquatic Park, replaced most existing structures with new buildings and piers with landfill, was never built. In the 1970s Born designed signage for the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) system. Born collaborated in the design of the Balboa Park Station and Glen Park Station, with Corlett & Spackman.
The Glen Park Station was Born"s last architectural design project
The Borns closed their design studio in 1973, later moved to San Diego where they lived in their retirement. He spent a decade collaborating with author Walter Horn to produce the 1979 Plan of Saint Gallery
Its illustrations are by Born. Ernest Born died in 1992, at the age of 94.