The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Renowned architech, developer dies

No one shaped Atlanta skyline like man behind Hyatt Regency, Peachtree Center, AmericasMa­rt.

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

John C. Portman Jr., the architect and developer whose post-modernist, and sometimes controvers­ial, style won him acclaim while altering the skylines of Atlanta

and cities around the world died Friday. He was 93.

No single architect shaped Atlanta’s skyline like Portman, who gave the city the Hyatt Regency, Peachtree Center, AmericasMa­rt

and the Westin Peachtree Plaza hotel. He also left his stamp from San Francisco to Shanghai, and helped revitalize Times Square with his famed New York Marriott Marquis.

Portman also backed numerous civic and philanthro­pic causes, and was a founding member of Atlan- ta’s Action Forum, a coalition of black and white business leaders, who worked to make Atlanta more racially and economical­ly inclusive and preserve Atlanta’s reputation as the “city too busy to hate.”

Former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young once said of Portman that “there is no one who has done more for Atlanta.”

His early career defined Atlanta, but his mid-career and later years shifted to Shanghai and Beijing where he designed and built mini-cities amid China’s ascension on the world’s stage.

But in his last few years, Portman and his companies returned to developmen­t in Atlanta, including the soon-to-be Midtown landmark, Coda, a futuristic hub for

entreprene­urs at Georgia Tech, his alma mater.

Portman also reclaimed one of his earliest works downtown, acquiring 230 Peachtree, the first office tower in Peachtree Center. The 27-story building reopened in 2016 and included a Hotel Indigo, refreshed office space and an upscale restaurant.

“It was real estate developmen­t, but it was bigger than that,” an emotional Portman said of his start with Peachtree Center at the reopening of 230 Peachtree. “Yes, I’m in love with Atlanta.”

In a statement on Saturday, the Portman companies — architectu­re firm John Portman & Associates, real estate developmen­t firm Portman Holdings, AmericasMa­rt and ADAC (Atlanta Decorative Arts Center) — said they will continue to operate under their current leadership.

Portman not only designed his visions but put himself and his companies on the line financiall­y by building them. He lost much of his fortune in the 1980s and then re-built his career primarily through internatio­nal projects.

It is unusual for someone to be both architect and developer, and his decision to combine the two careers sparked controvers­y.

Rival architect I.M. Pei once said Portman “has left architectu­re for developmen­t. You can’t be both. The interests are different.”

Portman, for his part, said that he never saw being an architect and a developer as separate.

“The architects said, ‘Hell, he’s not an architect. He’s a developer.’ The developers said, ‘He’s not a developer, he’s a damn architect.’ We were very sensitive to that,” Portman once told the AJC. “Then we came to the conclusion you are what you are. And it’s been an advantage.”

His designs also proved controvers­ial. Portman pioneered the modern floor-to-ceiling atrium hotel with downtown’s Hyatt Regency, and many of his towers are known for their soaring atriums, glass elevators, revolving rooftop restaurant­s and pedestrian bridges connecting buildings above street level.

He often said he liked to offer people an escape from cities. Critics, however, say his buildings are fortress-like and harm cities because they discourage pedestrian traffic.

In 2006, Portman told the AJC that he believed street life and pedestrian bridges can co-exist.

“I think you can have both,” he said. “I’ve been given a lot of criticism over the bridges. Venice (Italy) is my favorite city. I thought of the streets as canals. With the bridges, I wanted to tie the land masses together. This goes back to urban congestion. You’ve got all this smoke and fumes and congestion on the street. I was trying to create a people level that slides through all this stuff.”

Atlanta ‘part of my blood’

Portman was born Dec. 4, 1924, during a trip to Walhalla, South Carolina. His father, John Calvin Portman, was a government employee, and his mother Edna Rochester Portman, was a beautician.

As he liked to say, he was an Atlanta native — or “a native minus three weeks.”

“My mother was visiting in Walhalla, South Carolina, and I decided to come early,” Portman told the AJC in 2016. “We came back into Brookwood Station and I was three weeks old, and so I’m a native of the city. I’m a product of the city school sys- tem . ... I used to sell magazines up and down Peachtree when I was a kid. I’ve walked the sidewalks. It’s part of my blood.”

In 1944, he married Joan “Jan” Newton, who survives him.

He served as a midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy during World War II and earned a bachelor’s degree in architectu­re from Georgia Tech in 1950.

A few years later, he founded Edwards & Portman with H. Griffith Edwards, his former professor at Tech.

In 1961 they opened the Atlanta Merchandis­e Mart, the first of the Peachtree Center buildings.

Edwards retired in 1968, and the company, renamed John Portman & Associates, would over decades develop a number of downtown landmarks.

His Hyatt Regency Atlanta, completed in 1967, with its rotating rooftop restaurant and atrium was a radical idea that drew not only tourists but locals, who wanted to admire the soaring atrium and dine at the hotel’s restaurant. The atrium became a common feature in big convention hotels.

The Hyatt is the centerpiec­e of Peachtree Center, a complex that would eventually include eight office towers, three major hotels, retail shops and a huge wholesale trade mart.

Portman also designed and developed the Atlanta Gas Light Tower, the Atlanta Marriott Marquis and the Inforum building — now known as the American Cancer Society Center.

Portman was awarded numerous architectu­ral prizes in his career, as well as the Horatio Alger Award in 1990, an honor that noted Portman’s success from humble beginnings.

Some leaders credit Portman with saving downtown during a time when people were fleeing to the suburbs.

“He stuck with downtown Atlanta for decades when many people had left,” A.J. Robinson said in 2006. Robinson, who worked for Portman for 22 years, went on to become president and CEO of Central Atlanta Progress.

Portman said in 2016 he saw that return to cities — particular­ly in Atlanta — as an unshakable trend driven by demographi­cs.

Former Atlanta mayor Shirley Franklin called Portman “a towering figure in his charity, vision and architectu­re.”

He donated to help support the infancy of the Atlanta Beltline, and contribute­d to the city’s purchase of the papers of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., which became the centerpiec­e of the Center for Civil and Human Rights.

“John Portman gave generously to the world of his talents and gifts,” Franklin said. “He gave generously to Atlanta too, whether to the Beltline’s early developmen­t and the King papers acquisitio­n or his signature architectu­re. Just after its opening he sent his entire staff to visit the Center for Civil and Human Rights because he believed it was one of the most important places in the world.”

He helped other American cities as well. Portman is considered by some to be the architect most responsibl­e for restoring onceseedy Times Square and the New York Theater District to greatness with the 1985 opening of his New York Marriott Marquis. The hotel took him 13 years to complete. Forbes called the Marriott “a vital beachhead in reclaiming tawdry Times Square.”

In San Francisco, Portman’s 1973 Hyatt Regency San Francisco Hotel sparked a rebirth of the harbor area. The hotel is part of Portman’s Embarcader­o Center, his West Coast counterpar­t to Atlanta’s Peachtree Center, which includes two hotels and five office buildings.

He also designed General Motors’ famed, seven-tower Renaissanc­e Center in Detroit and the Bonaventur­e Hotel in Los Angeles.

When the real estate and capital markets nose-dived in the late 1980s, Portman took a hit. Part of the problem was One Peachtree Center (later to be known as SunTrust Plaza), which Portman conceived in 1987 and finally opened in 1992, did not have enough tenants. Also, a 1989 earthquake in California hurt business at The Portman in San Francisco, a hotel that was supposed to the first of a chain bearing his name. (The Portman is now a J.W. Marriott.)

On top of his domestic troubles, in the summer of 1989, the U.S. State Department asked all U.S. citizens to leave China. Portman was just starting Shanghai Centre. The project stalled.

During a five-year period, Portman sold his interest in most of his buildings or gave them back to his lenders. However, he continued to work both as an architect and developer, overseeing projects all over the world. He eventually bought back 100 percent of AmericasMa­rt.

Portman was also sensitive to criticism that his firm had looked beyond Atlanta in the 1990s and early 2000s, but Portman said much of that had to do with opportunit­y and growth abroad as many architects and developers sought business in China and India.

“There used to be a television show called “Have Gun — Will Travel,” Portman said in 2016. “Well, Have Idea — Will Travel.”

But as the American economy rebounded, Portman returned to Atlanta. His firm is part of a joint venture for a planned InterConti­nental hotel at Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, and his empire opened the revitalize­d 230 Peachtree. Portman also partnered with Georgia Tech to design and build Coda, a nearly $400 million skyscraper going up at Technology Square that will be home to some of the world’s most advanced computing technology, classrooms, research space and innovation labs for major companies.

“It’s not going to be your sterile corporate office building,” Portman vice chairman Jack Portman, one of Portman’s sons, said at the December 2016 groundbrea­king. “It will be dynamic . ... It will be a laboratory of innovation, brimming with brain power, combustibl­e ideas and creative energy.”

Earlier this year, his company landed one of the biggest economic developmen­t projects of 2017. In October, Anthem, the parent company of Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Georgia, announced it would move into a new Portman tower near Technology Square that could house 3,000 workers.

Finding beauty

Portman, a painter, sculptor and philosophe­r as well as an architect and businessma­n, said he found beauty everywhere.

In 2009-10, the High Museum of Art held a well-received retrospect­ive of his art, furniture and architectu­re.

“One of the most beautiful places to visit in the city is the sculpture garden at SunTrust Plaza in downtown,” said former Mayor Franklin. “It rivals the most exquisite and renowned small gardens anywhere. The garden is a serene place to reflect on life, the world and the universe with Portman sculpture and architectu­ral majesty witnessed in every inch of design.”

His modern designs also have captured the attention of Hollywood. In Los Angeles, the Bonaventur­e has been a frequent backdrop for film and TV projects, and the Westin Peachtree Plaza was the silent star of the 1981 Burt Reynolds action film “Sharkey’s Machine.”

“Mr. Portman set the standard on so many levels in the real estate industry throughout the world,” said Scott Taylor, the president of the Carter real estate services firm, which is a partner with Portman in the airport hotel. “He was a giant and will always be remembered as a visionary developer, an innovative architect, an exquisite artist, a community leader and a true Atlanta gentleman.”

Post-apocalypti­c young adult series such as the Hunger Games and Divergent have incorporat­ed his downtown Atlanta towers into their visions of the future.

Directors are “projecting a future by imagining how it would look in ruins,” Michael Hays, a professor of architectu­ral theory at Harvard, told The Atlantic in 2015.

“All the flesh has been removed and you just see the architectu­ral bones,” Mays told the magazine. “I’ve always thought Portman’s buildings would make very beautiful ruins, because the essence of them is so powerful and so direct.”

Portman is survived by his wife Jan; children Michael Wayne ( Jody) Portman, John Calvin ( Jack) Portman III, Jeffrey Lin Portman and his wife Lisa, Jana Lee Portman Simmons and her husband Jed, Jarel Penn Portman and his wife Traylor; his siblings Glenda Portman Dodrill, Anne Portman Davis, Joy Portman Roberts and her husband Phil; nineteen grandchild­ren, five great-grandchild­ren, many nieces, nephews, cousins, and other relatives and loved ones.

A public memorial will be held Jan. 5 in the atrium at Ameri-casMart. In lieu of flowers, the Portman family requests contributi­ons be made to the Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University, Office of Gift Records, Emory University, 1762 Clifton Rd. NE, Suite 1400, Atlanta, GA 30322. Condolence­s may be sent in care of Jana Portman Simmons, Portman Holdings, 303 Peachtree Center Avenue, NE, Suite 575, Atlanta, GA 30303.

 ??  ?? John C. Portman Jr.
John C. Portman Jr.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY KIKA WONG ?? The SunTrust Garden Offices John Portman designed and developed are shown in this 2009 photo.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY KIKA WONG The SunTrust Garden Offices John Portman designed and developed are shown in this 2009 photo.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY GABRIEL BENZUR ?? This 1956 photograph shows the Portman-designed Fraternal Order of Eagles building in Atlanta.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY GABRIEL BENZUR This 1956 photograph shows the Portman-designed Fraternal Order of Eagles building in Atlanta.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICHAEL PORTMAN ?? Portman also left his mark on cities around the world. This is a photo of the Shanghai Centre in China.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MICHAEL PORTMAN Portman also left his mark on cities around the world. This is a photo of the Shanghai Centre in China.
 ?? LANNA SWINDLER / AJC STAFF 1980 ?? Portman’s radical Hyatt Regency Atlanta lured tourists as well as locals to marvel at its soaring atrium.
LANNA SWINDLER / AJC STAFF 1980 Portman’s radical Hyatt Regency Atlanta lured tourists as well as locals to marvel at its soaring atrium.

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