Stephen Francis Voorhees FAIA (February 15, 1878 – January 23, 1965) was an American architect in practice in New York City from 1910 until 1959.
[1] He was educated in the Trenton public schools and at Princeton University, graduating in 1900 with a degree in civil engineering.
Major works designed by Voorhees included buildings for the New York Telephone Company in New York City, Bell Labs in Murray Hill, New Jersey, the Prudential Insurance Company in Newark, New Jersey, and buildings for Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Princeton University.
Voorhees remained active in the AIA until 1959, when his membership was suspended for two years due to ethics allegations.
[3] Voorhees was a trustee of Princeton University, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Stevens Institute of Technology.