Allen Siple

Allen Siple
Born
Allen George Siple

July 9, 1900
DiedJanuary 10, 1973 (aged 72)
Alma materUniversity of Southern California
École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts
OccupationArchitect
Parent(s)George H. Siple
Jessie Siple

Allen George Siple (July 9, 1900 – January 10, 1973) was an American architect, working in Southern California from the 1930s to 1960s.

Early life[edit]

Siple was born on July 9, 1900 in Otsego, Michigan.[1][2] His father, George H. Siple, was Canadian and his mother, Jessie, was from Michigan.[1] In 1924, his father retired to Southern California and they moved into a house located at 972 Arapahoe Street, Los Angeles, California.[1] He graduated from the University of Southern California and the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France.[1]

Siple House in West Los Angeles (1930s),
a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument
Grove Bungalow Court (1932) Santa Monica Boulevard, Westwood

Career[edit]

In Los Angeles, Siple worked as an architect for the Janss Investment Company. They were developing the community of Westwood in Los Angeles.[1]

1930s[edit]

In 1930, Siple designed the W.R. Balsom Jr. House in Westwood Hills.[1][3][4] In 1932, he designed "The Grove," also known as the "Grove Bungalow Court," located at 10669-10683 Santa Monica Boulevard in Westwood, Los Angeles.[1][5][6] In 1940, Edla Muir (1906-1971) added two rear cottages.[6][7] The property became a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 1987. In 1935, he designed the residence of actress Jane Withers (1926–2021) in Westwood Hills.[1][8][9] He designed the private residence of actor and producer Jack Conway (1887-1952) and his wife Virginia at All Hollows Farm in Pacific Palisades, California.[10] The house was called All Hollows Farm.[10] After Jack Conway's death in 1952, Debbie Reynolds (born 1932) and Eddie Fisher (1928-2010) purchased the property.[10]

1940s[edit]

From 1940 to 1941, Siple designed the Minnezawa Bell House located on Linda Flora Drive Bel Air for Monnezawa Bell (1911-1983), daughter of Alphonzo Bell (1875-1947), who developed Bel Air, California.[1][11] It is a 10-room, Colonial Revival Style mansion.[11][12] Later in the 1940s, he designed the "Knot Garden House," a Regency Revival mansion with Colonial Revival architecture interiors.[1][13][14][15][16] The property came with front gardens designed by locally renowned landscape architect Edward Huntsman-Trout (1889-1974).[13][17] Also in the 1940s, he designed the "South Lanai House," a Monterey Colonial style house.[13][18][19]

During 1946 and 1947, Siple designed the model home for the Tahquitz River Estates, a neighborhood development in Palm Springs, California, by real estate developer Paul Trousdale (1915-1990).[1][2][20][21] Siple also designed houses in Westdale, Los Angeles, another neighborhood developed by Trousdale.[2]

1960s[edit]

By the 1960s, Siple was the supervising architect for Trousdale Estates in Beverly Hills, California, another neighborhood developed by Trousdale, on the former Doheny Ranch on the east of Greystone Mansion.[2] He also designed Paul Trousdale's private residence in Palm Springs, California.[22]

Death[edit]

Siple died at the age of 72 on January 10, 1973 in Los Angeles County, California.[1]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Pacific Coast Architecture Databse
  2. ^ a b c d Alan Hess, Forgotten modern: California houses 1940-1970', Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith, 2007, pp. 262-264 [1]
  3. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: W. R. Balsom, Jr., House
  4. ^ 'Residence of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Balsom, Jr., Westwood Hills: Allen G. Siple, architect.', Architectural Digest, 9: 4, 14, 1934-1935
  5. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Grove Bungalow Court
  6. ^ a b Robert Winter (ed.), An Architectural Guidebook to Los Ángeles, Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith, 2003, p. 142 [2]
  7. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Edla Muir
  8. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Jane Withers House
  9. ^ 'Residence of Miss Jane Withers, Westwood Hills, California.', Architectural Digest, 10: 1, 90-91, 1938-1940
  10. ^ a b c Pacific Coast Architecture Database: All Hollows Farm
  11. ^ a b Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Minnezawa Bell House
  12. ^ 'New Bell Residence Offers Innovation', Los Angeles Times, E7, February 2, 1941
  13. ^ a b c Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Knot Garden House
  14. ^ 'Front Facade on cover', House Beautiful, front cover, July 1943
  15. ^ 'Back facade on front cover', House Beautiful, front cover, June 1946
  16. ^ Reuben Whitney, 'Twice a Cover House', House Beautiful, 89: 8, 41-47, August 1947
  17. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Edward Huntsman-Trout
  18. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: South Lanai House
  19. ^ Elizabeth Gordon, 'The idiom of traditionalism cloaks a relatively good floor plan and very good site plan', House Beautiful, 89:9, 09/1947, pp. 108-109
  20. ^ Pacific Coast Architecture Database: Trousdale Model Home
  21. ^ Elizabeth Gordon, 'How to Get Twice as much Use of Your Land', House Beautiful, 89: 11, 166-176, 11/1947
  22. ^ Huntington Digital Library, Huntington.org. Accessed March 28, 2024.

External links[edit]