Thursday’s report announcing the selection of four architectural firms to submit plans for the expansion of the Portland Museum of Art refers to the 1983 addition of the Payson Building. The addition was designed by architect Henry Nichols Cobb of New York and North Haven, a principal in the firm of Pei Cobb Freed and Partners who earned a world-wide reputation for planning such well-known buildings as Boston’s Hancock Tower and U.S. Courthouse.

Cobb’s ancestral ties to Portland included the Federal period merchant Matthew Cobb and a minister of the First Parish Church, Rev. Ichabod Nichols. These local roots gave him a unique perspective when he was selected to design the Payson Building in 1978. The result was a post-modern masterpiece, a bold contemporary statement using materials and forms traditional to Portland’s architecture. When the building opened in 1983, it was hailed as one of the most significant museum designs of its time.

Henry Cobb cared deeply about Portland. He lectured there several times about the history and urban development of the city, stressing its special qualities. Toward the end of his life, he closely followed the redesign of Congress Square as it related to the Payson Building. As the four architectural teams prepare their proposals for the museum, may they keep Cobb’s example in mind.

Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr.
Hallowell

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