Van Dorn Hooker


Van Dorn Hooker was an American architect and the University Architect for the University of New Mexico from 1963 to 1987.

Early life and education

Hooker was born September 22, 1921, in Carthage, Texas, the son of Van Dorn and Anne Hooker. He graduated from the College of Marshall, in Marshall, Texas in 1940. During World War II, he served in the US Army Corps of Engineers and later in the USAAF 25th Bombardment Squadron 1943 – 1945, stationed in India; in his spare time he was a cartoonist for Army news publications, and painted aircraft nose art.
After discharge, he obtained a Bachelor of Architecture degree at the University of Texas at Austin in 1947, and that same year married his university sweetheart, Marjorie Mead, who was also the first woman to receive a B.Arch. Degree from UT. Their honeymoon took them to New Mexico, where they first became familiar with the campus of the University of New Mexico with its unique Pueblo Revival architecture.

Career

Hooker was hired by the Santa Fe firm of Meem, Zehner, Holien and Associates in 1951. John Gaw Meem, who became Hooker’s mentor, was UNM’s preferred consulting architect, designing nearly all of some 30 campus buildings in the Pueblo Revival style between 1933 and 1957.
In 1955 Van Dorn partnered with John W. McHugh in a new practice, McHugh, Hooker, Bradley P. Kidder and Associates; his wife Peggy also became one of the associates. One of his projects was the original 1957 open-air theatre for the Santa Fe Opera. During this period he also served on the Archdiocese of Santa Fe's building committee, and developed an expertise in the restoration of adobe churches, including San Francisco de Asís Mission Church at Ranchos de Taos.

At UNM

In 1963 he left private practice to become UNM's first University Architect. During his 24-year tenure some 75 buildings were added, extended or remodelled on the campus, and UNM received more than 30 design awards for landscapes and buildings. He is recognized for his success at maintaining the pueblo revival style that prevails on the UNM campus. Hooker designed few of these buildings himself; his role was oversight and management of the campus development, during a period of great expansion of both curriculum and enrolment. He assembled teams of architects and engineers for this purpose, and was greatly involved in the landscaping, pedestrianization and traffic management of the spaces between buildings, on a main campus which was hemmed in by the surrounding city.

Other activities

Following his retirement in 1987, Hooker was a consultant to the New Mexico Legislation Council Service on renovation of the New Mexico State Capitol Building in Santa Fe, through 1991. He was also a talented watercolor artist and photographer; his paintings and images reflected his great affection for New Mexico.

Selected publications

Only in New Mexico: An Architectural History of the University of New Mexico, The First Century 1889–1989, 2000, University of New Mexico Press, Centuries of Hands: An Architectural History of St. Francis of Assisi Church , 1996, Sunstone Press, Memories, Memorials, and Monuments: A Companion to “Only in New Mexico: An Architectural History of the University of New Mexico: The First Century 1889–1989”, by Ann Hooker Clarke, Van Dorn Hooker, 2019, Park Place Publications