Richmond Harold Shreve (June 25, 1877 – September 11, 1946) was a Canadian-American architect.
He was born on June 25, 1877, in Cornwallis, Nova Scotia, the son of Richmond Shreve, an Anglican priest, and Mary Catherine Parker Hocken.
[1] Shreve attended Cornell University, taught there from 1902 to 1906, and was a member of the Sphinx Head Society.
His company Shreve, Lamb and Harmon led the construction of the Empire State Building[2] as well as several Cornell University buildings.
[3] Shreve was also the lead architect for the landmark 1937 Williamsburg Houses housing development in Brooklyn and the Parkchester planned community developed by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company in the east Bronx in 1941.