Private homes designed by Williams —
Inyo National Forest Williams designed more than 2,000 private homes, most of which were in the
Hollywood Hills and the
Mid-Wilshire portion of Los Angeles (including his own home in
Lafayette Square), part of historic
West Adams, Los Angeles. He also designed at least one home in the San Rafael district along with many others in
Pasadena and
La Cañada Flintridge. The Linda Vista Area of Pasadena has many Spanish Colonial and French Country homes of his design including many commissioned by business magnates (Chrysler Corporation) and actors. His most famous homes were for celebrities, and he was well regarded for his mastery of various architectural styles. and later the residence of
Barron Hilton, was used as the 'Colby mansion' in exterior scenes for
The Colbys television series. Williams's client list included
Frank Sinatra (the notorious pushbutton house),
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson,
Lon Chaney, Sr.,
Lucille Ball,
Julie London,
Tyrone Power (two houses),
Barbara Stanwyck,
Bert Lahr,
Charles Correll,
Will Hays,
Zasu Pitts, and
Danny Thomas. In contrast to these mansions, Williams co-designed with
Hilyard Robinson, the first federally funded public housing projects of the post-war period (
Langston Terrace in Washington, D.C.) and later the
Pueblo del Rio project in southeast Los Angeles. Williams famously remarked upon the bitter irony of the fact that most of the homes he designed, and whose construction he oversaw, were on parcels whose deeds included
segregation covenants barring Black people from purchasing them.
List of works In Los Angeles estate built in 1928 •
28th Street YMCA, NRHP-listed • Founder's Church of Religious Science (1960) •
Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Building (1949) • Hollywood YMCA •
Jay Paley House (1935) • Kelly Music Co. Building (1929) •
Kenneth Hahn Hall of Administration (
Stanton, Stockwell, Williams and Wilson) • Los Angeles International Airport • 501 World Way parking structure (1965) •
Theme Building (1960s) •
Marina Del Rey Middle School •
Stanley Mosk Courthouse (
Stanton, Stockwell, Williams and Wilson) •
Nickerson Gardens •
Perino's (1950 redesign and 1954 renovation) • Pueblo del Rio Housing Project (1941) •
Second Baptist Church, NRHP-listed • Pritzker Hall Psychology Tower •
Woodrow Wilson High School • One or more works in the
27th Street Historic District, NRHP-listed • Al Jolson's tomb at
Hillside Memorial Park, Culver City • Arrowhead Springs Hotel & Spa, San Bernardino •
Beverly Hills Hotel (1940s redesign and addition) • Roberts House Ranch "The Tropical Terrace", Malibu • Seaview Palos Verdes (1960)
In Nevada • Carver Park Homes • El Reno Apartments (1937), Reno •
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Reno NRHP-listed •
Guardian Angel Cathedral, Las Vegas • Herman House (1936), Reno •
La Concha Motel • One or more works in
Berkley Square, Las Vegas
Elsewhere • Hilltop Farm house (1934), Cedar Rapids, IA •
Hotel Nutibara (1945), Medellin, Colombia
Professional records In 1955, Williams was hired to transform a W.W.Woolworth store at the corner of Broadway and 45th in Los Angeles into the Broadway Federal Savings and Loan. When the bank opened, Williams safeguarded much of his business papers in the bank. During the fires that consumed the area after the Rodney King trial in 1992, the Broadway Bank burned and it was feared that much of Williams' archives had been lost. Williams family had carefully curated the documents and Williams' granddaughter, Karen Elyse Hudson, agreed to the acquisition of the archive by the Getty Research Institute and the USC School of Architecture. In June 2020,
Milton S. F. Curry of USC announced the contents of the archive: about 35,000 architectural plans, 10,000 original drawings, blueprints, photographs, and correspondence that help "fill the gaps of Los Angeles Modernism in the 20th century." ==Death==