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Schmidt, Garden & Martin
In 1906, the Schmidt-Garden partnership was formalized under the name of Richard E. Schmidt, Garden & Martin. The third partner was Edgar D. Martin (1871-1951), who later joined the firm of Pond & Pond. Schmidt brought business acumen and social connections to the partnership, while Garden brought the imagination, inventiveness, and sensitivity of a creative designer. Martin was an extremely skilled structural engineer who was able to solve technical problems associated with large industrial buildings and modern materials, such as the Montgomery Ward & Co. Catalog House (1908; 600 W. Chicago Ave.), one of the first buildings to be constructed of reinforced concrete.
Although known primarily for their commercial and industrial designs (e.g., Chapin and Gore, Schoenhofen Brewery Powerhouse), they also designed several residential buildings, more than 300 hospitals (e.g., Michael Reese; 1905; 2800 S. Ellis), and a few public structures. Garden, in particular, helped evolve the firm's progressive approach to design, much in the way that his contemporaries, Sullivan and Wright, had done. The style and details of Garden's architectural designs were so unique and distinctive that they often are referred to with the term "Gardenesque." The Prairie-style Humboldt Park Boathouse, Madlener House, and the Ward's Catalog House provide exceptional examples of this detailing.
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