Edwin L. Bauer
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Edwin Leo Bauer (1905–c.1989) was an American architect, who worked in Honolulu, Hawaii.
Early life and education
Originally from San Francisco, Bauer relocated to Honolulu in 1940, influenced by Roy Kelley, a fellow classmate from the University of Southern California. Bauer relocated to Honolulu in 1940.
Career
Bauer worked on residential, commercial, public, and religious buildings in Hawaii. A member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) from 1944, until his presumed death in 1984, His projects used natural ventilation and local materials.
Disappearance and legacy
On March 26, 1984, Bauer disappeared, last seen entering a bus along Kuhio Avenue in Honolulu. He had limited vision and Alzheimer’s disease at the time of his disappearance. Despite extensive searches, his fate remains unknown, and he was presumed dead 5 years later in 1989.
Bauer was a leading architect in Hawaii's mid-century architectural scene alongside contemporaries such as Alfred Preis, George "Pete" Wimberly, and Vladimir Ossipoff.
List of works
Bauer designed the following projects in Hawaii:
- Saint Patrick Catholic Church (school addition, 1950), Honolulu, Hawaii; 16 classroom building connected to the Catholic church
- Kuhio Homes Low Rent Housing Project (1952), Kalihi, Honolulu, Hawaii; 20 unit low rise affordable housing project.
- St. Elizabeth's Episcopal Church (1952), 720 North King Street, Honolulu, Hawaii; an ecclesiastical building in Honolulu.
- Breakers Hotel (1954), 250 Beach Walk, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; two-story, sixty-four-units with Japanese details
- Hawaiiana Hotel (1955), 260 Beach Walk, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; the design was similar to the nearby Breakers Hotel but more modern
- Hawaiian Village Hotel (1955; now Hilton Hawaiian Village), Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; a resort hotel and hallmark of tropical modernism.
- Palolo Valley Homes Housing Project (1956), Honolulu, Hawaii; another affordable housing project by Bauer.
- White Sands Hotel (1958), 426 Nahua Street, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; multi-building courtyard hotel.
- Kaiser Foundation Medical Center (1958, demolished in 1986), 1701 Ala Moana Blvd., Waikiki, Hawaii; with lanais and views of the Ala Wai Harbor.
- The Kalia (1958), 425 Ena Road, Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; a residential building in Waikiki.
- Harbor View Plaza (1965–1968), 1676 Ala Moana Blvd., Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii; condominiums in with “Waikiki Gateways” special district design historic preservation status.