Robert Lawton Jones


Robert "Bob" Lawton Jones was an American architect and academic recognized for his contributions to modernist architecture.

Background and Career

Bob Jones was born in McAlester, Oklahoma in 1925 and remained there through the end of high school, ultimately leaving to join the Navy during World War II. After the war, Jones attended the University of Notre Dame, where he graduated with a bachelor's degree in architecture. While a student at Notre Dame, Jones worked for the noted architectural firm Perkins and Will in nearby Chicago during the summer, later joining that firm upon graduation.
After two years at Perkins and Will, Jones pursued graduate study in architecture at Illinois Institute of Technology under noted modernist architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, "one of the great figures of 20th-century architecture", who led the IIT School of Architecture from 1938 to 1958. After competing his master's degree, Jones was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study architecture in Germany under Egon Eiermann.
In 1954, Jones returned to Oklahoma where he would complete many of his most notable works. His first design in Tulsa, the Tulsa Civic Center, was a critical success: one German critic declared it among the "top architectural achievements in the world during the past century." Settling in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Jones teamed with Oklahoma modernist architects and brothers David George and Lee Cloyd Murray to form the Murray Jones Murray firm. Jones' self-designed personal residence in Tulsa attracted international attention after a photograph of the structure by Julius Shulman made the cover of Progressive Architecture. He continued to work in a modern international style on numerous structures of varying purpose and scale, from the Tulsa International Airport to a Catholic church in Oklahoma City, along with numerous residential and commercial structures.
Before retiring, Jones also taught in the architecture and urban design programs at the University of Oklahoma and served as campus planner for the University of Tulsa.

Works