Eleanore Kendall Pettersen was an American architect. She was one of the first licensed female architects in New Jersey, where she operated a private practice from 1952 to 2002.
In 1950, Pettersen became one of the first women in New Jersey to be licensed as an architect. She began her career as a draftsman for, and later an apprentice to, Frank Lloyd Wright, working in Arizona and Wisconsin at Taliesin; she studied under Wright between 1941 and 1943. She lived in Tennessee from 1946 to 1950, during which time she designed power buildings and facilities for the Tennessee Valley Authority. In her early career, she also worked for the National Defense Research Committee, a job which involved analyzing the structures of enemy buildings. Pettersen established a private architectural practice in Saddle River, New Jersey, in 1952—making her the first woman in the state to open an architectural firm—and maintained it until 2002. During those 50 years, she designed more than 600 projects, both residential and commercial. Over the years she employed a number of interns and apprentices, preferring to hire right out of architecture school. Within a few weeks of being hired and initiated into the firm’s detail-oriented method, the new employees were assigned their own projects and were encouraged to work closely with the clients and to follow their projects through not only the design but building aspects as well. In July 1970, Pettersen formed Design Collaborative, an interior design component to her architectural firm, furthering her thorough involvement in the design process. Pettersen was primarily a residential architect. Perhaps her most famous work was a 1971 design of a 15-room house in Saddle River for businessman John Alford. Alford sold the house in 1981 to former U.S. president Richard Nixon, who lived there after resigning from politics. Pettersen also designed Bears Nest, a gated residential village in Park Ridge, New Jersey, where Nixon also lived after leaving Saddle River. She was licensed in six states other than New Jersey: Connecticut, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, and North Carolina. She was owner of two firms: Eleanore Pettersen, A.I.A., an architectural firm, and Design Collaborative, specializing in interior design. Pettersen's accomplishments were myriad, and she pioneered many "firsts" for women. In 1978, she became the first woman elected president of the New Jersey Board of Architects. She became the first female president of the American Institute of Architects' New Jersey chapter in 1985 and its first female regional director two years later. She was appointed to the AIA College of Fellows in 1991. In 1965, she was the first female recipient of Cooper Union's Professional Achievement Citation for Distinguished Accomplishments. She was the first woman appointed by the governor to the New Jersey State Board of Architects and subsequently its first woman president. In 1984, she became first female president of the New Jersey Society of Architects. From 1968 to 1970, Pettersen served as president of the Bergen CountyAltrusa Club, which is an organization for professional women.
Awards and exhibitions
Pettersen was featured in three exhibitions, namely:
Outstanding Services Award - New Jersey Commission on Women
President's Citation for Meritorious Service - New Jersey Society of Architects
Death and legacy
Pettersen died in 2003 in Saddle River, at the age of 86. Her papers are collected at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. She is the namesake of the "Eleanore Pettersen lecture" at Cooper Union, which discusses "principles of design excellence and ecological innovation". She was included in ", a documentary film produced by the Beverly Willis Architectural Foundation.