*** Welcome to piglix ***

Luckett and Farley

Luckett & Farley
Incorporated, 100% ESOP
Industry
  • Architecture
  • engineering
  • interior design
  • procurement
  • development
Founded 1853
Headquarters Louisville, Kentucky, US
Key people
  • Aric M. Andrew (President & CEO)
  • Susan Pittman (VP)
  • Jarred Cook (VP)
Number of employees
118
Website www.luckett-farley.com

Luckett & Farley is an architecture, engineering, and interior design firm based in Louisville, Kentucky, that was founded in 1853, making it (along with SmithGroup) the oldest continually operating architecture firm in the United States that is not a wholly owned subsidiary. The firm began under the name Rogers, Whitestone & Co., Architects, changing its name to Henry Whitestone in 1857, to D.X. Murphy & Brother in 1890, and to Luckett & Farley in 1962. The company is 100% employee-owned as of January 1, 2012 and concentrates on automotive, industrial, federal government, higher education, healthcare, and broadcast + media markets. There are more LEED professionals at Luckett & Farley than any other company in Kentucky with 50, as of December 2012.

Henry Whitestone (1819–1893) was born at Clondegad House in County Clare, Ireland. He immigrated to the United States amidst famine and depression with his wife Henrietta in January 1852 from Innis, Ireland after he was recommended to Isaiah Rogers (1800–1869), for his work on the County Clare Courthouse. Rogers was an architect based in Cincinnati who came to be known as "the father of the American hotel". Whitestone's first project with Rogers was the Capital Hotel in Frankfort, Kentucky and a partnership formed in November 1853 when Rogers was contracted to rebuild the recently burned Louisville Hotel. Whitestone moved from Frankfort to Louisville and received 2/5 of all profits from the services he performed with Rogers.

The first office of Isaiah Rogers and Henry Whitestone was located at Bullit and Main Streets, near where the Riverfront Plaza/Belvedere is located today. Together they transformed Louisville into a "five-story city" and introduced the Italianate architectural style to the region. Whitestone separated from Rogers in 1857 and soon became the preeminent architecture firm in Louisville through the 1880s. Notably, Charles J. Clarke worked for Henry Whitestone during the Civil War and later formed a partnership with Arthur Loomis, to form the historically significant Louisville architecture firm Clarke and Loomis.


...
Wikipedia

...