Architect Index
Named Architects.
- Elmer Grey (1872–1963) — Partner with Myron Hunt on signature Pasadena civic and institutional commissions of the 1910s and 1920s.
- Greene & Greene — Charles and Henry Greene operated their architectural practice in Pasadena from 1894 to 1916, producing the masterworks of American Arts & Crafts residential architecture — the so-called 'ultimate bungalows.' The Gamble House remains their best-preserved example and is operated as a museum.
- Myron Hunt (1868–1952) — Pasadena-based architect whose institutional and residential work shaped the formal civic and estate landscape of the SGV in the early 20th century. Frequently partnered with Elmer Grey.
- Roland E. Coate (1890–1958) — California Monterey Colonial Revival was substantially advanced by Coate's residential practice in the 1920s and 1930s. His SGV inventory is concentrated in San Marino.
- Sylvanus Marston (1883–1946) — Pasadena architect credited with creating the bungalow-court typology in the early 1900s. His practice (later Marston, Van Pelt & Maybury) produced an enormous volume of SGV residential and institutional work spanning multiple style periods.
- Wallace Neff (1895–1982) — Pasadena-born and Pasadena-based for most of his career, Wallace Neff defined the California Mediterranean Revival idiom from the 1920s through the 1960s. His SGV inventory is concentrated in San Marino, Pasadena, and La Cañada Flintridge.