Osvaldo Toro and Miguel Ferrer met in 1938 as employees of the
Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration (PRRA). In their official roles Toro and Ferrer became disillusioned with the official
eclectic approach to architecture and in 1945 they and Luis Torregrosa, a
civil engineer, left to form a private sector firm known as Toro, Ferrer y Torregrosa. They soon won their first important commission, the
Caribe Hilton Hotel (1949). The architect had been chosen in a
competition in which Puerto Rican and mainland architects participated. The mainland architects offered entries designed in the
Spanish Colonial Revival style, promoting a romantic and idyllic view of the island, while the Puerto Ricans offered
modernist projects. For the interiors of the hotel, the firm collaborated with Warner—Leeds of
New York City. The senior partner of that firm,
Charles H. Warner Jr., had been a Columbia classmate of Toro's. The hotel was covered widely in the professional architectural press and was awarded a silver medal at the eighth Pan-American Congress of Architects in 1950.
Henry-Russell Hitchcock found the hotel to be "the most successful of the resort hotels in Latin America" and that their work generally had a "special quality in [its] planning which effectively combines North American and Latin American ideas." In 1952 Torregrosa withdrew from the firm, which continued as Toro—Ferrer. Their next important work was the
Supreme Court Building (1955,
NRHP-listed), in which they expanded on their ideas and again collaborated with Warner. and the Intendente Ramirez Building of the
Puerto Rico Department of Treasury (1969) in
San Juan Antiguo, the
La Concha Resort (1958) in
Santurce The partnership of Toro and Ferrer survived until 1984. ==Partner biographies==