Kump was a prolific inventor holding 59 international and U.S.
patents. During the 1940s, Kump created Prebilt production designs as a solution to low cost, prefabricated structures. This technology was used to create defense housing during a collaboration with the noted firm of
Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons. He created Tekkto Systems in 1970 to explore the potential of space age technology for mass production of low-cost housing. That same year, the
American Institute of Architects recognized the importance of Ernest J. Kump Associates, praising Kump as "a pioneer of modular practices and systems concepts in architecture." In 1990, Kump partnered with Hiko Takeda to continue his research and development of
modular building systems while acting as a private consultant. Many of his patents,
trademarks, and
copyrights were a product of this partnership. Kump authored several books. The most noted of his writings was a short
manifesto published in the
AIA Journal entitled ″A New Architecture for Man,″ in which he expressed his belief that architecture at its core was the ″expression of feeling through ordered space environment″ and that the basic unit of architectural vocabulary was modular space rather than material. In accordance with these beliefs, he advocated for an architectural design approach based on ″cellular organization of organic units of space environment.″ To achieve ″true organic three–dimensional planning,″ Kump believed that architects should create self–contained modular units that would be both flexible and attractive. The arrangement of these modular units would inherently express order, variety, and economy and result in a better architecture for man. Kump made several contributions to the profession by serving on President
Ronald Reagan's Task Force for Arts and Humanities and teaching at many universities, including Harvard,
Columbia,
Stanford, and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was elected a Fellow of the
American Institute of Architects in 1956, and was a member of the
Royal Institute of British Architects,
Royal Society of Arts in London, the
Academy of Arts, Berlin, and the
International Union of Architects and International Arts and Letters in Switzerland. He served as Chair of the American Institute of Architects Committee on School Buildings, 1948–1949; as a judge for the
American Institute of Steel Construction's 1949 contest for the most beautiful bridge in the U.S; as an AIA Delegate to the International Congress of Architects, 1951–1955; and as a member of the City of Palo Alto School Planning Committee, 1949–1955. In 1957 Kump bought
Schloss Matzen a historic gothic castle in the Austrian Tyrol. He undertook modernisation works to install central heating, shore up it walls, glaze some of the open arcading and improve the traffic circulation and took a great interest in its medieval construction and intricate floorplan. After his retirement he and his wife Josephine spent several a months a year there. == Legacy ==