Frederick J. Osterling

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Frederick J. Osterling
Union Trust Building (1917) in Downtown Pittsburgh

Frederick John Osterling (October 4, 1865 – July 5, 1934) was an American architect, practicing in Pittsburgh from 1888.

Biography

Frederick J. Osterling Office and Studio

Frederick J. Osterling was born to Philip and Bertha Osterling in

Union Trust Building (1915–17). According to Martin Aurand, Architecture Librarian at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh,[2] Osterling's practice faltered after controversy relating to his anticipated alteration to the landmark H.H. Richardson Allegheny County Courthouse and a public lawsuit filed by the industrialist Henry Clay Frick. Osterling's studio was in a building he designed himself in 1917 at 228 Isabella Street in Pittsburgh's North Shore neighborhood
.

Some of Osterling's works are pictured in a book entitled, " F. J. Osterling Architect", Murdoch-Kerr Press, Pittsburg, 1904. The book contains about 40 plates (some lithos, some artists drawings) depicting Osterling's works. These plates include views of the Washington County, Pennsylvania Court House, its portico and law library; the entrance and smoking room of the Syria Temple (Pittsburgh); and the residences H.H. Westinghouse and other notable Western Pennsylvanians. He died on July 5, 1934, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Significant buildings designed by Osterling

All buildings are in Pittsburgh unless otherwise stated; italics denote a registered Historic Landmark:

Byrnes & Kiefer Building
Armstrong Cork Company (1901), now The Cork Factory Lofts in the Strip District neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
Washington County Jail (1899)
Carnegie Free Library of Beaver Falls, PA (1903)
  • Carnegie Free Library of Beaver Falls (Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania), 1903
  • Iroquois Apartments, now offices (3600 Forbes Avenue), 1903
  • Allegheny County Jail (Ross Street), 1903-1905 additions by Osterling to the 1886 building by Henry Hobson Richardson
  • Allegheny High School, now Allegheny Traditional Academy (810 Arch Street), 1904
  • Commonwealth Trust Building (312 Fourth Avenue), 1907
  • Luzerne County Courthouse (Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania), 1909
  • Parkvale Building (200 Meyran Ave), 1911[7]
  • Union Trust Building
    (501 Grant Street), 1917
  • Gwinner-Harter House
    , also known as the William B. Negley House (5061 Fifth Avenue) was designed by an unknown architect and built 1870–1871. However, Osterling was responsible for additions between 1912 and 1923.
  • Osterling Flats, date unavailable. These are three houses at 3603-3607 California Avenue with Dutch design elements, which were converted into condos by the Brighton Heights Citizens' Federation in 2003.[8]

Gallery

Notes

  1. The Darlington Collection
    , Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh
  2. ^ Aurand, Frederick J. Osterling and a Tale of Two Buildings, exhibition catalogue, Pennsylvania Heritage 15:2
  3. . Retrieved 2009-08-28.
  4. .
  5. ^ "Agreement submitted to the Board of Trustees by F.J. Osterling". U. Grant Miller Library Digital Archives. Washington & Jefferson College. January 2, 1901. Retrieved 2010-04-24.
  6. Observer Reporter. Washington, Pennsylvania. 2010-04-26. Retrieved 2010-05-07. [dead link
    ]
  7. ^ Lubenau, Joel O. (Winter 2011). "Vanadium: Stained Gglass, Helpful Metal". Western Pennsylvania History. 94 (4): 52. Retrieved February 24, 2018.
  8. ^ Post-Gazette, May 3, 2003

External links

References