, San Francisco. Wurster's firm, along with
Lawrence Halprin, were responsible for developing the conceptual re-use plan for the Square in the early 1960s. Following his graduation, Wurster briefly apprenticed in the office of
John W. Reid Jr., a San Francisco architect who worked mainly on schools, before Wurster became the architectural designer for
Charles Dean in 1920. For the next two years, he worked designing the city of Sacramento's water filtration plant. During this time, he also worked independently, designing several small residences. In April 1922, he became a registered architect within California. Following this, Wurster embarked on a tour of Europe, where he encountered art and design he had previously only known through books, before returning to the United States in 1923 and heading to New York where he joined the office of
Delano and Aldrich, who were known for their work on the John D. Rockefeller Estate at Pocantico Hills and Otto Kahn's château at Cold Spring Harbor. In 1924
William Adams Delano lent Wurster money to open his own office and he returned to the Bay Area to open it in the Hotel Whitecotton in Berkeley. with the Bay Area and its regional style, along with Wurster's mentor
Bernard Maybeck, the landscape architect
Thomas Church, and fellow architect
Joseph Esherick. Wurster designed hundreds of California houses in the 1920s through the 1940s using indigenous materials and a direct, simple style suited to the climate. His 1928 Gregory Farmhouse in
Scotts Valley, California is regarded as the prototypical
ranch-style house, and a direct influence on the subsequent development of the
Northwest Regional style of
John Yeon and
Pietro Belluschi. In 1930, Wurster hired his first long-term employee, Floyd Comstock, setting the trend of the Wurster office serving as the training ground of many generations of architects who worked within the firm during its life. In 1940, Wurster married
Catherine Bauer, an influential figure in her own right in the field of public housing. He met Bauer while both were attending the
Harvard Graduate School of Design, where they took classes from the German Socialist city planner
Martin Wagner. Wurster's graduate studies at Harvard were interrupted when he was appointed dean of the architectural and planning school at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1945, a position he held for five years. During 1949 and 1950, he simultaneously held the chair of the National Park and Planning Commission. Both Bauer and Wurster withstood accusations of disloyalty from the California
Tenney Committee during the
Red Scare of the late 1940s. Also in 1945, Wurster co-founded the firm
Wurster, Bernardi & Emmons (WBE) with
Theodore Bernardi and
Donn Emmons. In 1950, he was named dean of the UC Berkeley Architecture school. In 1959, he orchestrated the creation of the
UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design, which brought the three schools of architecture, landscape architecture and urban planning into one organization. He served as its dean until his retirement in 1963 for health reasons. == Bauer Wurster Hall ==