Louis de Moll FAIA (19 August 1924 – 15 October 2013) was an American architect active in Philadelphia from 1955 to 1986.
[2] De Moll served as partner in charge of design and in 1965 he was appointed vice president of operations.
[5] De Moll joined the American Institute of Architects in 1955 as a member of the Philadelphia chapter.
[3] De Moll participated in several working groups of the International Union of Architects (UIA) during the 1970s and when UIA members encouraged the AIA to run an American candidate for president of the organization, they nominated de Moll.
In recognition of his leadership of the AIA and the UIA, de Moll was elected to honorary membership in the national architectural associations of Bolivia, Bulgaria, Canada, Chili, Hungary, Mexico, Spain, Uruguay and Venezuela and the Pan American Federation of Architects' Associations (FPAA).
[1] They had five children and in 1950 settled in Rose Valley, a community developed by architect William Lightfoot Price.