The Cooper Apartments, also known as Seaside Apartments, is a distinctive example of the small garden court apartments prevalent in the
Waikiki neighborhood of
Honolulu before
World War II. This two-story, concrete masonry edifice housed ten units arranged in an L-shape, centering around a paved, brick-walled courtyard which is accessible through a
moon gate from the street. The architectural detailing extends to a cantilevered second-story
lanai, corridor embellished with a wrought-iron railing exhibiting a foliate pattern, reaching upwards to the roof. The design also features fret-work doors and large sliding windows to facilitated the flow of cooling trade winds into the individual units, embodying a design responsive to Hawaii's tropical climate. The building is a fine example of the modern design ethos of the architectural firm Dahl & Conrad.
Bjarne Dahl, the senior partner, graduated from the Chicago Technical School in 1918 and worked with California architect
Julia Morgan for five years. He moved to Hawaii in 1926 as the supervising architect for Morgan's
YWCA project, and decided to make Hawaii his home. After a series of professional engagements, Dahl established his own office in 1935. The following year, he formed a partnership with Conrad "Connie" Conrad, a graduate in architecture from the University of Southern California who arrived in Hawaii in 1934. Their partnership, which lasted until the end of 1941 following the bombing of
Pearl Harbor, resulted in a variety of architectural designs encompassing apartments, residences, and commercial buildings. Their design philosophy was rooted in a regional offshoot of modernism, a style well-reflected in the Seaside Apartments. Unfortunately, many of their architectural creations in Waikiki have been demolished to make way for larger-scale developments, but the Seaside Apartments continues to stand as a significant example of their modern design legacy in Hawaii. == Modern usage and preservation ==