Tachau and Vought was an American architectural firm active in the mid-twentieth-century New York City that specialized in mental hygiene hospitals.
Eliot Butler Willauer (April 4, 1912 – February 6, 1972) was a principal from around 1945 until 1946.
[1][2][3] The firm moved from 109 Lexington Avenue to 102 East 30th Street around 1923.
[4] Like many New York architectural firms active during the Great Depression, Tachau & Vought worked in "almost continuous employment on Federal, State or City work," which included its inclusion on Mayor Fiorello La Guardia's list of architects since the compendium's inception on.
"From 1918...[the firm] specialized in mental hygiene hospitals."