

The first publication to catalog the complete works of architect and arts advocate Alfred Preis, a Viennese modernist who fled Nazi-occupied Austria and transformed regional Hawaiian architecture, with his best-known project being the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor.
Architect, planner, and arts advocate Alfred Preis (1911–1994) dedicated his many creative talents to his beloved, adopted home, Hawai‘i. Born to a Jewish family, raised, and educated in Vienna, Preis became an exile after escaping from Nazi-occupied Austria in 1939 and briefly being interned as an “enemy alien” when the United States entered World War II. Preis emerged as one of Hawai‘i’s leading modern architects in the 1950s and 1960s. His celebrated architectural career spanned twenty-three years. In this time, he designed almost one hundred and eighty completed projects ranging from residences, schools, commercial buildings, and public parks. His new, regionalist vision for architecture and planning were specific to the Hawaiian context, its people, its tropical climate, and its stunning landscape. Preis’s crowning achievement was his design for the famed USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor in 1962.
This is the first publication to examine Alfred Preis’s body of work in architecture, which spans from 1939 to 1963, including not only several acclaimed public projects but also illustrating the transition from a European modern language into a regional modernism, unifying both cultures in distinct and pioneering ways.
In later years through his legislative work, Alfred Preis became a visionary advocate and leader for the public arts, creating the first 1% law in the United States, which stipulated that 1% of all public building construction be used for the purchase of public art.
- Price: $34.95
- Pages: 256
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: DoppelHouse Press
- Imprint: DoppelHouse Press
- Publication Date: 20th September 2022
- Trim Size: 7.5 x 9.5 in
- Illustration Note: color and black and white photographs
- ISBN: 9781954600140
- Format: Paperback
- BISACs:
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Artists, Architects, Photographers
ARCHITECTURE / Regional
ARCHITECTURE / Individual Architects & Firms / Essays
ARCHITECTURE / History / Contemporary (1945-)
On May 30, 1962, the USS Arizona Memorial was officially dedicated. The white concrete and steel structure is 184 feet (56 metres) long and spans the wreckage. It was designed by Alfred Preis, an Austrian-born architect who was sent to a U.S. internment camp after the Pearl Harbor attack. His simple design features a concave silhouette, with the middle representing the country’s low point following the attack and the raised ends symbolizing victory. The 21 open-air windows are said to reference a 21-gun salute. In 1980 oversight of the memorial was transferred to the National Park Service. Approximately 1.8 million people visit the memorial each year.
—Brittanica.comPreis is best known for his design of the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor, though he worked extensively on residences, schools, and parks in Honolulu and O’ahu. Preis was pragmatic, client-oriented, and a modernist with training in the holistic principles of Wagner and Loos that he understood and adopted. Over the years, he would shift to a regional modernism.
—Architects+ArtisansThe first major effort to this date to bring the Austrian-American architect back into the international spotlight by capturing, illustrating, and contextualizing the wide spectrum and influence of his prolific architectural and advocacy work. With his architecture as central focus, [Alfred Preis Displaced] seeks an opportunity to highlight Preis’s built work to a larger audience and acknowledge the bi-cultural exchange between Austria and the US state of Hawai‘i.
—ArtFix DailyCommitted to progressive racial and social causes in the islands’ political and social spheres [...] Preis articulated the value of locally-sourced materials and examples of his work include how the islands coped with material shortages after the war. He also constructed hundreds of homes for low-to-middle-income state residents, defining himself as an architect not for the elite, but as a designer for the people of Hawaiʻi.
—University of Hawai‘i NewsPreis — who fled Nazi-occupied Austria in 1939 and two years later was forced into internment with Japanese and German nationals at the Sand Island Detainment Camp — built some of the Hawai‘i's most enduring structures and institutions. He designed the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor and founded the Hawai‘i State Foundation for Culture and Arts, serving as executive director from 1966-1980.
—On the Grid, newsletter of CalPoly Pomona, College of Environmental Design
Acknowledgements
Preface Axel Schmitzberger
Introduction Stephen Phillips
Refugee Axel Schmitzberger
Student Alfred Preis, The Formative Years in Vienna, 1932–1938 August J. Sarnitz
Apprentice Axel Schmitzberger
Pioneer Axel Schmitzberger
Developer Axel Schmitzberger
Space Maker Axel Schmitzberger
Modernist Alfred Preis and the Austrian Modernist Diaspora Shared Perspectives: The Wiener Wohnkultur and The New Space The Crisis of Modernism in Austria Christopher Long, Ph.D.
Advocate The USS Arizona Memorial — A Timeline 2Axel Schmitzberger
Correlator Alfred Preis and Frank Lloyd Wright: In the Nature of Materials Laura McGuire, Ph.D.
Art Czar Axel Schmitzberger
Work Overview Axel Schmitzberger and Laka Preis-Carpenter
Alfred Preis Biography
Bibliography
Image Credits
About the Authors
Index
The first publication to catalog the complete works of architect and arts advocate Alfred Preis, a Viennese modernist who fled Nazi-occupied Austria and transformed regional Hawaiian architecture, with his best-known project being the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor.
Architect, planner, and arts advocate Alfred Preis (1911–1994) dedicated his many creative talents to his beloved, adopted home, Hawai‘i. Born to a Jewish family, raised, and educated in Vienna, Preis became an exile after escaping from Nazi-occupied Austria in 1939 and briefly being interned as an “enemy alien” when the United States entered World War II. Preis emerged as one of Hawai‘i’s leading modern architects in the 1950s and 1960s. His celebrated architectural career spanned twenty-three years. In this time, he designed almost one hundred and eighty completed projects ranging from residences, schools, commercial buildings, and public parks. His new, regionalist vision for architecture and planning were specific to the Hawaiian context, its people, its tropical climate, and its stunning landscape. Preis’s crowning achievement was his design for the famed USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor in 1962.
This is the first publication to examine Alfred Preis’s body of work in architecture, which spans from 1939 to 1963, including not only several acclaimed public projects but also illustrating the transition from a European modern language into a regional modernism, unifying both cultures in distinct and pioneering ways.
In later years through his legislative work, Alfred Preis became a visionary advocate and leader for the public arts, creating the first 1% law in the United States, which stipulated that 1% of all public building construction be used for the purchase of public art.
- Price: $34.95
- Pages: 256
- Carton Quantity: 20
- Publisher: DoppelHouse Press
- Imprint: DoppelHouse Press
- Publication Date: 20th September 2022
- Trim Size: 7.5 x 9.5 in
- Illustrations Note: color and black and white photographs
- ISBN: 9781954600140
- Format: Paperback
- BISACs:
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Artists, Architects, Photographers
ARCHITECTURE / Regional
ARCHITECTURE / Individual Architects & Firms / Essays
ARCHITECTURE / History / Contemporary (1945-)
On May 30, 1962, the USS Arizona Memorial was officially dedicated. The white concrete and steel structure is 184 feet (56 metres) long and spans the wreckage. It was designed by Alfred Preis, an Austrian-born architect who was sent to a U.S. internment camp after the Pearl Harbor attack. His simple design features a concave silhouette, with the middle representing the country’s low point following the attack and the raised ends symbolizing victory. The 21 open-air windows are said to reference a 21-gun salute. In 1980 oversight of the memorial was transferred to the National Park Service. Approximately 1.8 million people visit the memorial each year.
—Brittanica.comPreis is best known for his design of the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor, though he worked extensively on residences, schools, and parks in Honolulu and O’ahu. Preis was pragmatic, client-oriented, and a modernist with training in the holistic principles of Wagner and Loos that he understood and adopted. Over the years, he would shift to a regional modernism.
—Architects+ArtisansThe first major effort to this date to bring the Austrian-American architect back into the international spotlight by capturing, illustrating, and contextualizing the wide spectrum and influence of his prolific architectural and advocacy work. With his architecture as central focus, [Alfred Preis Displaced] seeks an opportunity to highlight Preis’s built work to a larger audience and acknowledge the bi-cultural exchange between Austria and the US state of Hawai‘i.
—ArtFix DailyCommitted to progressive racial and social causes in the islands’ political and social spheres [...] Preis articulated the value of locally-sourced materials and examples of his work include how the islands coped with material shortages after the war. He also constructed hundreds of homes for low-to-middle-income state residents, defining himself as an architect not for the elite, but as a designer for the people of Hawaiʻi.
—University of Hawai‘i NewsPreis — who fled Nazi-occupied Austria in 1939 and two years later was forced into internment with Japanese and German nationals at the Sand Island Detainment Camp — built some of the Hawai‘i's most enduring structures and institutions. He designed the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor and founded the Hawai‘i State Foundation for Culture and Arts, serving as executive director from 1966-1980.
—On the Grid, newsletter of CalPoly Pomona, College of Environmental Design
Acknowledgements
Preface Axel Schmitzberger
Introduction Stephen Phillips
Refugee Axel Schmitzberger
Student Alfred Preis, The Formative Years in Vienna, 1932–1938 August J. Sarnitz
Apprentice Axel Schmitzberger
Pioneer Axel Schmitzberger
Developer Axel Schmitzberger
Space Maker Axel Schmitzberger
Modernist Alfred Preis and the Austrian Modernist Diaspora Shared Perspectives: The Wiener Wohnkultur and The New Space The Crisis of Modernism in Austria Christopher Long, Ph.D.
Advocate The USS Arizona Memorial — A Timeline 2Axel Schmitzberger
Correlator Alfred Preis and Frank Lloyd Wright: In the Nature of Materials Laura McGuire, Ph.D.
Art Czar Axel Schmitzberger
Work Overview Axel Schmitzberger and Laka Preis-Carpenter
Alfred Preis Biography
Bibliography
Image Credits
About the Authors
Index