Architectural design, specializing in schools, commercial buildings, and skyscrapers
Caudill Rowlett Scott (CRS) was an architecture firm founded in
Houston,
Texas, the United States in 1946. In 1983, J.E. Sirrine, an industrial engineering firm, merged with the company and the company's name was changed to CRSS, popularly known as CRS-Sirrine. It divested itself in 1994.
History
The firm was started in 1946 by
Texas A&M University professors
William Wayne Caudill and John Miles Rowlett (1914–1978),[1][2] first in
Austin, Texas and soon after were located in
College Station, Texas.[3] The partners were joined in 1948 by Wallie Eugene Scott Jr. (1921–1989), who was Caudill's student.[2]William Merriweather Peña, another student of Caudill's was hired in 1948.[4][5] He was the first employee and in 1949, he was made a partner. He expressed that it would be best to keep the company name with the first three partners names rather than extending it with each new partner.[6] In 1954, Thomas A. Bullock Sr. (1922-2007) became a partner.
In the 1950s,[2] they were known for building schools,[5] with a "lean and clean" style. The schools, generally one-story, had simple designs with classrooms on one side of a corridor, maximization of windows for lighting and ventilation, and shed, flat, or gabled roofs.[7] In
San Angelo, Texas, the
Central High School was constructed with an open design, having 13 buildings on a campus. It was the first fully air-conditioned school in the country. Using the outdoors as an aesthetic, they designed a glass-walled and domed gymnasium in
Brownsville, Texas for
St. Josephs Academy. The editor of ArchitectureWeek stated that "they became known as masters of modern practice and construction management."[7] In 1958, CRS moved their office to
Houston from
Bryan, Texas. They began designing hospitals and had designed school and university buildings in eight countries and 26 states by 1969.[2]
The firm relied on research, including studies and surveys that they conducted, such as with the
Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station (TEES) Architecture Division, as well as the publications that they produced. For instance, Caudill authored the book Toward Better School Design. This involved the programming and designing business practice[3] documented and promoted by William "Willie" Peña in Problem Seeking: An architectural programming primer in 1969 with a CRS programmer, John Focke. Its concepts were incorporated into the
National Council of Architectural Registration Boards (NCARB) in 1973,[8][9] and it has become a standard architecture textbook.[4]
Over the years, it developed a national reputation and also had international clients. It opened regional offices and the six partner firm employed 250 employees.[3] It became a public corporation, CRS Design Associates, Inc. in 1970 and had added engineering and construction divisions.[10] It was listed on the
American Stock Exchange in 1971.[3] During the 1970's the firm became known for prestigious projects in the Middle East, including
Saudi University of Petroleum and Minerals (now known as King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals) in Dhahran, which is notable for its contemporary Islamic design, and
Riyadh University. The firm was also active in Kuwait and elsewhere in the
Gulf States.[11]
In 1983, J.E. Sirrine, an industrial engineering firm, became part of the company and the company's name was changed to CRSS, popularly known as CRS-Sirrine. The Sirrine arm of the firm continued to pursue engineering work, much of it in the
pulp and paper industry, while the architecture group continued to focus primarily on architecture-related work.
Eventually, the corporation also developed a core group which focused on businesses related to both architecture and industrial engineering. CRS Capital became involved in
reinsurance for A/E-related firms and became involved in development of power-generation facilities. In 1994, a few years after the death of Scott, CRSS began divesting itself, selling off the architectural group to
HOK of St. Louis and the Sirrine engineering division to
Jacobs Engineering Group of Pasadena, California.[12]
University of Medicine & Pharmacy, Saigon, Republic of Vietnam (1966), not true, author Thierry Delfosse is completely wrong. The Saigon Medical Education Center was actually designed by the American architectural firm Smith Hinchman & Grylls with the collaboration of a group of 5 Vietnamese architects led by
Ngô Viết Thụ[25]
^
abBill Marvel of the Dallas Times Herald (March 13, 1985).
"Institute enshrines architect of schools". The Seguin Gazette Enterprise. Seguin, Texas. p. 26. Retrieved May 15, 2017 – via newspapers.com.
^
abJonathan King; Philip Langdon.
"Schoolhouse Modernism". ArchitectureWeek. Retrieved April 8, 2017.
^Jonathan King; Philip Langdon, eds. (2002). The CRS Team and the Business of Architecture. Texas A&M University Press. pp. 45–46.
ISBN978-1-58544-206-5.