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Nathan Silver (architect)

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Nathan Silver
Born(1936-03-11)11 March 1936
Manhattan, New York City, United States
Died19 May 2025(2025-05-19) (aged 89)
London, England
NationalityUnited States
United Kingdom
Alma materCooper Union
Columbia University
University of Cambridge
Occupation(s)Architecture critic
Architect
Lecturer
Spouse(s)Caroline Green[1] (1961–1970)
Helen McNeil-Ashton (?–?)[2]
Roxy Beaujolais(?–2025)[2]
Children2

Nathan Silver (11 March 1936 - 19 May 2025) was a British-American architect and architecture critic.[2] He is best known as the author of "Lost New York" (1967), which chronicled the loss of New York City's architectural heritage.[2][3]

Early life and education

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Silver was born to Jewish parents, Isaac, an architect who also taught mechanical drawing at Stuyvesant High School and Libby Nachimowsky, a Hebrew school teacher, who later became a public school teacher. He was raised in Inwood, Manhattan and the Bronx.[2]

He earned a certificate in architecture at Cooper Union, and then studied at Columbia University, graduating with a bachelor's degree in architecture in 1955.[2] In 1966 he completed a Masters at Cambridge University in England.[2]

Career

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After graduating, Silver traveled in Europe on a fellowship, before starting to work at Kramer & Kramer architectural firm and with architect, Percival Goodman.[2][4]

In 1961, Silver began teaching at Columbia University, where in 1964 he curated an exhibition about the city's lost built heritage.[2] Silver felt compelled to mount the exhibition in the wake of the announcements that Pennsylvania Station would be demolished and that the Metropolitan Opera House on 39th Street would also be razed.[2]

The exhibition expanded into Silver's eventual book project, "Lost New York", published in 1967.[5] The book was a finalist for National Book Award for Nonfiction (History and Biography), and according to Silver, sold 100, 000 copies.[2] He was also named a Guggenheim Fellow in 1968.[6][2]

Prior to the book's release, Silver had moved permanently to England and began lecturing in architecture at Cambridge University in 1965.[2] He was later the head of the architecture department at the University of East London, whilst also running how own architectural practice and was a partner in another.

He was also the regular architectural critic for The New Statesman magazine from 1967 to 1974.[2][7] He also contributed to Metropolis, Architectural Forum, The Nation, Atlantic Monthly, The New York Times Book Review, Encounter, The Sunday Times Magazine, Harpers & Queen, The London Evening Standard and Blueprint.[7]

Personal life

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Silver was married three times. He married Caroline Green, an English model and freelance journalist in 1961, before divorcing in 1970.[1][2] He later married American academic, Helen McNeil-Ashton, daughter of abstract expressionist painter, George McNeil.[2] They had two children together, a daughter, Liberty Silver, and a son, Gabriel Silver, before divorcing.[2] His final marriage was to Adelaide-born Roxy Beaujolais, landlady of a 17th-century pub.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b Ellis, Sue (21 April 2022). Caroline Silver obituary The Guardian. Retrieved on 22 June 2025
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Sandomir, Richard (21 June 2025). Nathan Silver, Who Chronicled a Vanished New York, Dies at 89 The New York Times. Retrieved on 23 June 2025
  3. ^ Dunlap, David. W (3 December 2014). From Afar, Still Defending New York’s Landmarks, and the Stories They Hold The New York Times. Retrieved on 23 June 2025
  4. ^ Gray, Christopher (12 December 1999). Streetscapes/Nathan Silver and 'Lost New York'; Author of a Preservation Classic Revisits the Past The New York Times. Retrieved on 23 June 2025
  5. ^ Gray, Christopher (13 February 2014), Belles of the Wrecking Ball The New York Times. Retrieved on 23 June 2025
  6. ^ Exlore Fellows Guggenheim Fellowship. Retrieved on 23 June 2025
  7. ^ a b Publication Nathan Silver Architects. Retrieved on 23 June 2025