Robert T. Coles, FAIA, 2008. Credit: Coles Family.

ROBERT TAYNHAM COLES , FAIA

Architect, Educator, And Social Justice Activist

Born    August 24, 1929,Buffalo, New York, U.S.

Died     May 16, 2020

Education     

University of Minnesota (BA) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (March)

First black Chancellor of the College of Fellows in 1994.

First African American to win the Rotch Traveling Scholarship awarded by the Boston Society of Architects,

First African American Chancellor of the American Institute of Architects (AIA),[2] 

First AIA Vice-President for Minority Affairs, and a founding member of the  National Organization of Minority Architects (NOMA).

First African American owned firm in New York State and in the Northeast in 1963,  Robert Coles, Architect in Buffalo, New York.

First black Chancellor of the College of Fellows in 1994.

Inducted into the Western New York Business Hall of Fame on November 1, 2018. The Buffalo History Museum hosts the Western New York Business Hall of Fame as a permanent exhibit.

the 2019 Edward C. Kemper awardee by the American Institutes of Architects. From the announcement of the award:

Mr. Coles attended Hampton University in 1947 before transferring to the University of Minnesota in 1949, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1951 and a Bachelor of Architecture in 1953. Coles received his Master of Architecture from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1955. While at MIT, Coles wrote his thesis on urban renewal in his hometown of Buffalo, New York, where he later opened his practice

Coles worked for firms such as Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson, Carl Koch and Associates and Techbuilt, before opening his own practice in 1963.

 His first project was the commission of his thesis project, the Ellicott District Recreation Center, known today as the John F. Kennedy Recreation Centre by the city of Buffalo. Coles considered his firm’s first project also his first advocacy project, emerging from conversations with a community facing the threat of urban renewal. Community engagement became a crux of Coles’s career, and he continued to pursue diversity, inclusion, and equity in his work. Coles was also an outspoken critic of the field of architecture, advocating for better equity, access, and opportunities for women and minority practitioners.

Coles was the Langston Hughes Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the University of Kansas in 1989, where he delivered the lecture “Black Architects, An Endangered Species” which was later published in Progressive Architecture Magazine. In 1990-1995, Coles was an Associate Professor of Architecture at Carnegie Mellon University.

Robert Traynham Coles (1929-2020). Photograph by Irene Haupt.

Robert Coles was married to artist, writer, and arts patron Sylvia R. Coles .The couple has two children, Marion Brigette and Darcy Eliot.

Robert Traynham Coles passed away at age 90 on May 16, 2020 in Buffalo. 

Figure 1John F. Kennedy recreation Center

Publications

Architecture + Advocacy, Buffalo Arts Publishing (2016)


Merriweather Library

Renown Projects

  • Robert T. Coles House and Studio, Buffalo NY (1961) 
  • John F. Kennedy Recreation Center, Buffalo NY (1963) 
  • Lindbergh Center Station, Atlanta GA (1983) 
  • Frank Reeves Municipal Center, Washington DC (1986) 
  • Frank Merriweather Library, Buffalo NY (1995) 
  • Ambulatory Care Project for Harlem Hospital, Harlem NY (1998) 
  • 1955 Rotch Traveling Fellowship, Boston Society of Architects 
  • 1963 Award of Merit (for Robert T. Coles House), AIA 
  • 1977 Doctor of Letters (Honorary), Medaille College, Buffalo, NY 
  • 1981 Whitney M. Young, Jr. Citation, AIA for his social justice advocacy in the profession 
  • 2004 James Williams Kideney Gold Medal Award, AIA New York State 
  • 2009 Robert and Louise Bethune Award, Buffalo/WNY AIA 
  • 2011 Fellows Award, Honors Awards Jury AIA New York State 
  • 2016 Diversity Award, Buffalo/WNY AIA 
  • 2019 Edward C. Kemper Award, AIA