Ellerbe Becket

American architectural practice From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ellerbe Becket was an independent Minneapolis, Minnesota-based architectural, engineering, interior design and construction firm until 2009, when it was acquired by AECOM.[1]

Quick Facts Founded, Fate ...
Ellerbe Becket
Founded1909
FateAcquired by AECOM
Headquarters,
Number of locations
Dallas, Kansas City, San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Dubai, Doha
ServicesArchitecture, Interiors, Graphics, Planning
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The firm currently[when?] employs 475 people in seven locations and three countries, and has designed buildings in all of the 50 states and in 20 countries.[citation needed]

History

The company originally called Ellerbe & Co. was founded by Franklin Ellerbe in 1909 in St. Paul, Minnesota. Its first clients included the Mayo Clinic and 3M. Thomas Ellerbe took over the company in 1921 upon his father's death. When he retired in 1966 it became an employee-owned company. In 1988 it merged with Welton Becket and Associates of Los Angeles and became Ellerbe Becket.[2] In 1988 it opened a sports design division in Kansas City. On October 26, 2009, Ellerbe Becket joined the architecture, planning, and engineering firm AECOM.

Projects

Summarize
Perspective

General buildings

Health care

Residential Structures

Due to the relationship between Franklin Ellerbe, Mayo Clinic co-founder William James Mayo, and builder Garfield Schwartz at the turn of the 20th century, Ellerbe's residential portfolio exists almost exclusively in Rochester, Minnesota.[3]

Sports facilities

The following were designed by the Kansas City Sports Venue branch

Stadiums

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Lumen Field

Arenas

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Barclays Center
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Gainbridge Fieldhouse
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Wells Fargo Center
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KeyBank Center, Buffalo, New York

References

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