Robert Allan Jacobs
Robert Allan Jacobs was an American architect in practice in New York City from 1935 to 1976. From 1939 until 1965 he was the partner of Ely Jacques Kahn in the firm of Kahn & Jacobs.
Life and career
Jacobs was born September 16, 1905, in New York City to Harry Allan Jacobs, an architect, and Elsie Jacobs. He was educated at Amherst College and at Columbia University, graduating from the latter in 1934. After graduation he traveled to Paris, where he worked in the studio of architect Le Corbusier during the winter of 1934–35. He then returned to the United States, where he joined the New York City office of Harrison & Fouilhoux. In the fall of 1935 Corbusier traveled to the United States for a lecture tour, and Jacobs served as his guide and interpreter from October to December. Jacobs then returned to Harrison, remaining with him until 1938, when he joined the firm of Ely Jacques Kahn, a close friend of his late father. He became a junior partner in 1939 and a full partner in 1941 in the reorganized Kahn & Jacobs. Among their first works as partners was the Municipal Asphalt Plant. Jacobs claimed credit for the design, which he based on the work of engineer Eugène Freyssinet. Otherwise the firm built on their previous reputation for the design of large office buildings. These, designed both independently and with others, include:- 445 Park Avenue, New York City
- 100 Park Avenue, New York City
- 1407 Broadway, New York City
- 425 Park Avenue, New York City
- Seagram Building, New York City
- Travelers Building, Boston
- 399 Park Avenue, New York City
- One Constitution Plaza, Hartford, Connecticut
- 811 Tenth Avenue, New York City
- 810 Seventh Avenue, New York City
- Jacob K. Javits Federal Building, New York City
- 1 New York Plaza, New York City
- 2 New York Plaza, New York City
- AT&T City Center, Birmingham, Alabama
- One Astor Plaza, New York City
- One Penn Plaza, New York City
- 1095 Avenue of the Americas, New York City
Other projects include:
- Carver Houses, New York City
- Terrence Building, Rochester, New York
- American Airlines Terminal 8, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Queens
Jacobs joined the American Institute of Architects in 1940 and was elected a fellow in 1953. He also served as president of the Architectural League of New York from 1962 to 1964 and was affiliated with the Manhattan Council of the Boy Scouts of America, the National Institute for Architectural Education, the International Union of Architects and the Municipal Art Society.