Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Influentia­l California architect William Krisel dead at the age of 92

- By Robert Jablon

LOS ANGELES » William Krisel, a modernist architect who designed 40,000 tract homes imbued with now-iconic Southern California touches such as butterfly roofs, post-and-beam constructi­on and swimming pools, has died. He was 92.

Krisel died Monday at his condominiu­m in Beverly Hills, part of a complex he designed, said Chris Menrad, a longtime friend and president of the Palm Springs Modern Committee, a nonprofit group dedicated to preserving desert modern architectu­re.

Krisel’s work includes the Palm Springs “House of Tomorrow,” a three-story estate built in concentric circles, where Elvis and Priscilla Presley honeymoone­d in 1967.

He and his longtime business partner, the late Dan Palmer, also designed dozens of custom homes in the wealthy Bel Air and Brentwood neighborho­ods of Los Angeles.

But it was tract homes that made Krisel’s name in the post-World War II housing boom.

During the 1950s and 1960s he and Palmer worked with developers in the Los Angeles and San Diego areas, Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley and elsewhere, creating homes that were cheap to build yet elegant.

“One of his gifts was that he could do very great, wonderful design (and) he could present it and sell it to developers...such that they would make money,” Menrad said.

He would present one or two basic floor plans, often built around a square “which is the cheapest thing to build,” Menrad said.

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