Benjamin Latrobe designed the Louisiana State Bank Building, located at 430 Royal Street in New Orleans. Preservationist Richard Koch took this 1934 photograph as part of his work for the Historic American Building Survey (HABS). Learn more »
A fervent preservationist and talented architect, Richard Koch is perhaps best known for his work with the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) during the Great Depression. As district officer, Koch led a team of architects in their efforts to document endangered historic buildings in Louisiana with drawings, plans, and photographs. A leader in the establishment of the Vieux Carre Commission and the Arts and Crafts Club of New Orleans, Koch was also a dominant figure in the civic and cultural life of New Orleans, particularly during the 1920s and 1930s. His work promoted scholarly research, cultural enhancement, and civic development in ways entirely unforeseen at the time.
Early Life and Career
Born
June 9, 1889, in New Orleans, Koch was the son of Anna Frotscher and Julius
Koch, a German immigrant. After earning
his architectural degree from Tulane University in 1910, Koch continued his studies in Paris,
France. He then worked in several northeastern architectural offices before
returning to New Orleans in
1916. On his return, Koch formed a partnership with Charles Armstrong, with
whom he had studied in Paris.
The
Armstrong Koch firm pioneered the restoration and adaptive reuse of historic
buildings in the state. The firm reclaimed and restored many buildings,
including Shadows-on-the-Teche in 1922,
and Oak Alley, the legendary
plantation house in Vacherie, in
1926. That same year the firm also restored the Victor David House at 620 St.
Peter Street in New Orleans. Next door, Koch designed a new building for Le
Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre in a
traditional style that blended seamlessly with its surroundings.
A good draftsman and watercolorist, Koch became an accomplished photographer of buildings in the 1930s, before such skills were commonplace. With his large-format Hasselblad camera, he recorded many irreplaceable landmarks, often just ahead of the wrecking ball. His firm’s restorations helped increase awareness of the need for historic preservation and spark a renaissance of cultural activity in New Orleans’s French Quarter.
Historic American Buildings Survey
In
1934, Koch became leader of HABS in Louisiana. The first federal preservation
program, HABS documented America’s architectural heritage on a state-by-state
basis. Koch’s encyclopedic knowledge of Louisiana’s historic buildings and his
reputation for exacting standards made him an ideal choice to lead the survey. Soon
after his appointment, he assembled a talented team of nineteen architects and
draftsmen. Augmenting Koch’s photographic contribution were two well-known pre-World
War II architectural photographers, Robert
E. Tebbs and Frances Benjamin
Johnston. During the next seven years,
Koch and his team traveled the back roads of rural Louisiana and the
picturesque streets of New Orleans, documenting the state’s most valuable and
endangered buildings.
In
what may be the most comprehensive record ever compiled of Louisiana’s historical
architecture, Koch created a wish list of 150 structures that he deemed worthy
of documenting, based on age, rareness of type, and vulnerability to demolition
or decay. Documentation of each building consisted of exact, often beautiful,
measured drawings; photographs (many taken by Koch); and written information.
The final portfolios were sent to Washington, DC, and placed in the Prints and
Documents Division of the Library of Congress, where they are available for
public use. Copies are also available in various repositories around the state.
Under his leadership, the team managed to document sixty-three buildings before
the outbreak of World War II curtailed
HABS activities.
Shortly after Koch began his work with HABS, Charles Armstrong ended their architectural partnership. Samuel Wilson, Jr., who had documented the Beauregard-Keyes House, the Cabildo, the Ursuline Convent, and other buildings for HABS, joined Koch’s firm in 1935. Together, Koch and Wilson worked on Works Progress Administration projects in New Orleans’s City Park, such as the golf house, pigeonnieres, shelters, bridges, gardens, and stadium. Wilson was made partner in 1955 and the two undertook many restorations, including the Pitot House, the Pontalba Buildings, Gallier House, San Francisco Plantation, and St. Patrick Church in New Orleans. Working together until Koch’s death on September 20, 1971, the two also executed a number of new buildings.
Koch’s Legacy
As
a pioneer preservationist, Koch’s seminal work and enthusiastic promotion
helped ignite statewide interest in preserving, displaying, and promoting
Louisiana’s unrivalled architectural heritage. In New Orleans, his firm’s
restoration of French Quarter buildings helped develop many now-popular tourist
destinations. The Beauregard Keyes House, Madam John’s Legacy, the Hermann-Grima
House, Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, the Girod House (now known as The
Napoleon House) and the Villa Meilleur
(now known as The African-American History Museum) are all examples.
Though
Koch’s career coincided with modernism’s break with traditional forms, only one
of his buildings suggested the influence of the popular International Style:
the tuberculosis unit for Lafayette Charity Hospital in Lafayette. Of all house
styles, Koch stated that his favorite was the Louisiana colonial style of Pitot
House on Bayou St. John in New Orleans. Essentially, Koch remained an
eclectic traditionalist, never married to any one stylistic convention. His
frequent collaborations with Armstrong, Wilson, and others enhanced and
reflected his eclecticism.
Much
contemporary scholarly research is based on the measured drawings created
through Koch’s survey work. Reconstructions, such as those of the cupola of the Cabildo after the 1986 fire, and the rare
double flues of the Rene Beauregard House chimney at the Chalmette
Battle Ground, used survey drawings to
recreate the damaged buildings exactly. As a preservationist, an architect, and
a documentarian, Koch played a central role, perhaps the central role, in
Louisiana’s architectural history. Many of his records and papers are in the Southeastern
Architectural Archive at Tulane
University.
Cite This Entry
Chicago Manual of Style
McCollam , Julie H. "Richard Koch." In KnowLA Encyclopedia of Louisiana, edited by David Johnson. Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, 2010–. Article published January 31, 2011. http://www.knowla.org/entry/503/.
MLA Style
McCollam , Julie H. "Richard Koch." KnowLA Encyclopedia of Louisiana. Ed. David Johnson. Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities, 31 Jan. 2011. Web. 19 Jun. 2013.
Suggested Reading
Would you like to learn more about this topic from books and other reading materials?
Cullison, William
R. “Tulane’s Richard Koch Collection—A Visual Survey of Historic Architecture
in the Mississippi Delta.” Louisiana History, 18 (Fall 1977): 453–471.
---. Historic Mississippi Delta Architecture: Photographs from Tulane’s Richard Koch Collection. New Orleans: Louisiana Landmarks Society, 1978.
Dickenson, Russell E., Robert Broshar, and Daniel J. Boorstin. Foreword to Alicia Stamm and C. Ford Peatross (eds.), Historic America: Buildings, Structures and Sites, Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1983.
McCollam, Julie H. “The Louisiana HABS Catalog.” In Jessie Poesch and Barbara SoRelle Bacot (eds.), Louisiana Buildings, 1720–1940: The Historic American Buildings Survey, Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University, 1997.
Peterson, Charles E., FAIA, “The Historic American Buildings Survey: Its Beginnings.” In Alicia Stamm and C. Ford Peatross (eds.), Historic America: Buildings, Structures and Sites, Washington, DC: Library of Congress, 1983.
Pierson, William H., Jr. The Colonial and Neoclassical Styles. London: Oxford University Press, 1986.
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