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Der Scutt | |
|---|---|
| Born | Donald Clark Scutt (1934-10-17)October 17, 1934 Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
| Died | March 14, 2010(2010-03-14) (aged 75) Manhattan,New York City, U.S. |
| Alma mater | Yale University |
| Occupation | Architect |
| Spouses | |
| Awards | Service Award (Illuminating Engineering Society, 1976) |
| Practice |
|
| Buildings | Trump Tower |
| Design | One Astor Plaza |

Der Scutt (October 17, 1934 – March 14, 2010) was an Americanarchitect and designer of several major buildings throughoutNew York City and theUnited States.[3]
Scutt worked onTrump Tower[3] next to theTiffany & Co. flagship store onFifth Avenue,New York City, developed byDonald Trump. His other major buildings includeOne Astor Plaza, 520Madison Avenue, the Continental Insurance Corporation headquarters in New York City, and theNorthwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company Headquarters inMilwaukee. He was the design consultant for theGrand Hyatt New York.
Scutt was bornDonald Clark Scutt inWyomissing, Pennsylvania, in 1934, nearReading. He attended theWyomissing Polytechnic Institute andPenn State University. After working withPhilip Johnson for a year, he transferred and received his master's degree in architecture fromYale University.
In 1961 he joinedEdward Durell Stone. From 1962 to 1965, Scutt worked forPaul Rudolph and managed Rudolph's New York office. From 1965 to 1975, Scutt was an associate with Kahn and Jacobs, where he designedOne Astor Plaza. He joined Poor Swanke Hayden & Connell Architects in 1975 and was a partner in charge of design there from 1976 to 1981. Der Scutt began his own private practice in 1981.
Scutt established his own firm, Der Scutt Architect, in 1981 and was awarded an impressive group of commissions, including the 55-story100 United Nations Plaza Tower luxury condominium, the 57-storyCorinthian luxury condominium in New York City,HSBC Bank USA headquarters in New York City, and theRoure Bertrand Dupont United States headquarters inNew Jersey. Scutt's major high rise office building renovations include those at 505Park Avenue, 625 Madison Avenue,575 Lexington Avenue, 1633Broadway, 57 West 57th Street, 823 United Nations Plaza,555 Fifth Avenue, the world corporate headquarters of International Flavors and Fragrances, and 1615 L Street in Washington, D.C.[4]
Scutt participated actively as an author, lecturer, teacher, and officer in a variety of professional organizations. He was vice-chairman of the New York Building Congress for five years. He was the 1976 recipient of the Illuminating Engineering Society's Distinguished Service Award and was the first architect to receive that award. In 1979 he was elected to the prestigious and coveted Fellow Grade of the Illuminating Engineering Society of North America (I.E.S.N.A.) Scutt was a fellow of theAmerican Institute of Architects.
As the project designer for numerous corporate and institutional buildings and interiors, Scutt's work has been published in magazines, newspapers, professional journals and popular magazines — both in the United States and internationally. In November 1981,The New York Times Magazine cover photograph included Scutt as one of New York City's prominent master architects, along withJohn Burgee,Cesar Pelli,Philip Johnson,Edward Barnes, andRaúl de Armas. In 1984, two magazines,Interiors andThe Designer, published cover stories on Scutt.
In 1987 Der Scutt was selected by a group of prestigious architects to be included in the international bibliography,Contemporary Architects. He was a visiting critic in architectural design atHarvard University,Yale University, andWashington University in St. Louis. He also served on numerous design juries for the AIA, IESNA, Concrete Industry Board of New York, Progressive Architecture and The Tucker National Architecture Awards.
In 1989, Scutt bought his first ship model at a flea market and amassed one of the most unusual private nautical collections in the world. His collection spanned four centuries, including ocean liners, warships, commercial ships, sailing ships, and paddle steamers. The models came from all over the world. Articles on his collection of over six hundred models appeared inThe New York Times,The Journal of Commerce,Town & Country,Nautical Collector, and other publications. In 2001 theSouth Street Seaport Museum acquired the Der Scutt Collection of Ocean Liner models and memorabilia.[5]
In 1996, theReading Public Museum featured a major retrospective exhibit of Der Scutt's work and published the first comprehensive book on his work.[6]
Scutt was a trustee of theSouth Street Seaport Museum from 1991 to 2006, and a trustee of the South Street Seaport Museum Foundation until his death.[7] He was formerly a trustee of the Ocean Liner Museum of New York, theMaritime Industry Museum and theNational Maritime Historical Society.
Der Scutt died ofliver failure at his home in Manhattan on March 14, 2010.[3]
Following is a partial list of his completed projects
In the satirical 2016-movieDonald Trump's The Art of the Deal: The Movie Scutt was portrayed byJack McBrayer.