While she was studying in Boston, Close met her future husband, Winston Close, who was also a graduate student. It was not easy for women to enter the architecture profession at the time; after being rejected by two firms, she accepted an appointment by the third and started work in
Philadelphia, working under architect
Oscar Stonorov. Winston and Elizabeth Close married in 1938, at which time her professional status was so unusual that the local paper ran an article titled "Architect Weds Architect." Elizabeth ran the family firm while her husband was away during
World War II and from 1950 to 1971 when he was head architect to the
University of Minnesota. They designed fourteen houses in the
University Grove neighborhood owned by the University of Minnesota for its professors and staff, including their own home. ==Death and legacy==