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Tuesday, August 5, 2025 |
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Architect William B. Tabler Sr. Dies at 89 |
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BROOKVILLE, N.Y.- William B. Tabler Sr., an architect famous for designing Hilton hotels such as the 46-story New York Hilton near Rockefeller Center, died at 89. His son William B. Tabler Jr., will continue the architectural practice in Manhattan. Mr. Tabler’s designs traded charm for efficiency affecting generations of travelers after World War II. Mr. Tabler’s distinguished 12-story Washington Hilton of 1965, was designed to permit all of the 1,250 guest rooms to face outside, rather than having some overlook courtyards. More than half of the hotel’s floor area, including the ballroom, was built below ground so that it would conform to Washington’s strict height limit. The 1,200-room Hilton in San Francisco, built near Union Square in 1964, was called a motel within a hotel because Mr. Tabler’s design allowed guests to drive their cars up ramps through the core of the building to park on the same floor as their rooms. On the exterior, windows alternated with structural panels, creating a kind of checkerboard facade that masked the X-shaped braces providing earthquake resistance.
Mr. Tabler was born in Momence, Illinois, and received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Harvard. In 1939 he joined the Chicago firm Holabird & Root, where he worked on his first big hotel project, the 1,000-room Statler Hotel in Washington. After serving in the Navy during the Second World War, he was asked to head Statler’s in-house architecture department in 1946. He formed his own practice in 1955. He designed more than 400 hotels. Among his recent projects were the 376-room New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge, 333 Adams Street in Brooklyn, which opened in 1998, and the 714-room Grand Hyatt Cairo, which opened in 2000. Mr. Tabler designed Hilton hotels in Baltimore, Indianapolis, Pittsburgh and St. Paul; Statler hotels in Dallas and Hartford; and InterContinental hotels worldwide.
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Today's News
August 5, 2025
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A major cultural season at PHI: New exhibitions by Josèfa Ntjam, Manuel Mathieu, and Keiken
Kunsthalle Friart Fribourg presents Art & Alienation
Jonathan Adler curates a joyfully eclectic take on craft at the Museum of Arts and Design
New exhibition at GT House explores hidden forces and collective subconsciousness
Mexico celebrates 200 years of its first national museum
Allan Rohan Crite: Madonna of the Subway on view at Tufts University Art Galleries
Complete Terence Davies film retrospective this September at MoMI
Inaugural edition of the Walk&Talk Biennial
The Contemporary Dayton presents three new exhibitions by three women artists
"Blaze, Smolder, Char", a fiery exploration of smoke and flame at Sohn Fine Art
Plans revealed for week-long celebration marking 200 years of the modern railway
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