The architectural firm of Kiehnel and Elliot was established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1906. The firm did substantial work in Florida, and moved to Miami in 1922. From 1926, it was known as Kiehnel, Elliot and Chalfant. Kiehnel advanced to Art Moderne styling in the Carlyle Hotel on Miami Beach and the 1924 Scottish Rite Masonic Temple on the Miami River, the first Art Deco building in the area. He also designed the Annie Russell Theatre, a Romanesque Revival building on the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park.
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| - The architectural firm of Kiehnel and Elliot was established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1906. The firm did substantial work in Florida, and moved to Miami in 1922. From 1926, it was known as Kiehnel, Elliot and Chalfant. Kiehnel advanced to Art Moderne styling in the Carlyle Hotel on Miami Beach and the 1924 Scottish Rite Masonic Temple on the Miami River, the first Art Deco building in the area. He also designed the Annie Russell Theatre, a Romanesque Revival building on the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park. (en)
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| - Bartholomew J. Donnelly House
- Baxter High School
- Bay Shore Historic District
- Daytona Beach, FL
- 1906 establishments in Pennsylvania
- Kiehnel and Elliott buildings
- Rolyat Hotel
- Coral Gables Congregational Church
- Old U.S. Post Office and Courthouse (Miami, Florida)
- Coconut Grove Playhouse
- El Jardin
- Gardner Steel Conference Center
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Annie Russell Theatre
- Snell Arcade
- École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts
- Stetson University College of Law
- Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
- American people of German descent
- Architects from Florida
- Architects from Pittsburgh
- Mediterranean Revival architects
- Winter Park, Florida
- Florida
- Greenfield Elementary School (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania)
- Gulfport, Florida
- Design companies established in 1906
- Pitcairn, Pennsylvania
- St. Petersburg, Florida
- Coral Gables Elementary School
- Miami High School (Miami, Florida)
- Kirk Munroe
- Miami
- Miami, Florida
- Miami Shores, FL
- National Register of Historic Places
- Seybold Building and Arcade
- University of Breslau
- Palm Island, Miami Beach
- Building at 10108 Northeast 1st Avenue
- Building at 107 Northeast 96th Street
- Building at 121 Northeast 100th Street
- Building at 145 Northeast 95th Street
- Building at 257 Northeast 91st Street
- Building at 262 Northeast 96th Street
- Building at 273 Northeast 98th Street
- Building at 276 Northeast 98th Street
- Building at 310 Northeast 99th Street
- Building at 361 Northeast 97th Street
- Building at 384 Northeast 94th Street
- Building at 431 Northeast 94th Street
- Stetson College of Law
- dbr:Bryan_Memorial_Methodist_Church
- dbr:Carlyle_Hotel_(Miami_Beach)
- dbr:Cherokee_Lodge
- dbr:Cherokee_Lodge_Carriage_House
- dbr:First_National_Bank_of_Pitcairn
- dbr:Henius_House
- dbr:John_B._Orr_residence
- dbr:La_Brisa_(Coconut_Grove,_Florida)
- dbr:Scottish_Rite_Masonic_Temple_(Miami)
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| - The architectural firm of Kiehnel and Elliot was established in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1906. The firm did substantial work in Florida, and moved to Miami in 1922. From 1926, it was known as Kiehnel, Elliot and Chalfant. Richard Kiehnel (1870–1944) was the firm's senior partner. He was born in Germany and studied at the University of Breslau and the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Kiehnel's first commission in the Miami area was in 1917 and he opened the firm's Miami office in 1922. He supervised the construction of El Jardin, the earliest known Mediterranean Revival work remaining in Miami. Designing the mansion for John Bindley, President of the Pittsburgh Steel Company, Kiehnel departed from the Mission style that had only recently made its appearance in Florida and provided an elaborate antiquity for the house by using aging techniques to get the desired effect. Kiehnel introduced Mediterranean Revival to Pinellas County through his designs of the Rolyat Hotel in Gulfport, Florida (now part of Stetson College of Law) and the Snell Arcade in St. Petersburg, Florida. Kiehnel advanced to Art Moderne styling in the Carlyle Hotel on Miami Beach and the 1924 Scottish Rite Masonic Temple on the Miami River, the first Art Deco building in the area. He also designed the Annie Russell Theatre, a Romanesque Revival building on the campus of Rollins College in Winter Park. Kiehnel was active in his profession. He was a member of the Pittsburgh chapter of the American Institute of Architects since 1906 and a member of the national body from 1913. He was a charter member of the Florida South chapter and its president in 1930-1931 From 1935 to 1942 Kiehnel was the editor of Florida Architecture and Allied Arts magazine. A number of Kiehnel's and the firm's works are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. (en)
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