Carson and Lundin

[1] That year he and Earl H. Lundin, another Harrison employee, were named Resident Architects for the center's developers, in which role they would serve until 1957.

[2] Earl H. Lundin AIA was born January 11, 1902, in Detroit he was educated at the University of Michigan, graduating in 1923.

[5] He worked for Harrison & Fouilhoux in New York City until 1941, when he joined the navy for the duration of World War II.

In 1945 he returned to California and joined the office of Lutah Maria Riggs in Santa Barbara, for whom he had worked in the summers of 1937 and 1938.

In 1962 Carson, Lundin & Shaw was one of seven firms considered to design the original World Trade Center, but lost the job to Minoru Yamasaki & Associates.

[7] Major projects completed during the 1960s include the quarter-mile long Swan Street Building (1968) in Albany, part of Empire State Plaza.

[11] In April of 1979 state officials had noticed that the heavy marble slabs that made up the facade of the firm's Swan Street Building (1968) had come loose and may be in danger of falling.

75 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City , designed by Carson & Lundin and completed in 1947.
660 Fifth Avenue in New York City , designed by Carson & Lundin and completed in 1957.
55 Public Square in Cleveland , designed by Carson & Lundin and completed in 1958.
The former 4 New York Plaza in New York City , designed by Carson, Lundin & Shaw and completed in 1969.
Chase Tower in Shreveport, Louisiana , designed by Carson, Lundin & Thorson and completed in 1976.