Mel Streeter (1931-2006)

January 21, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Donald King

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Mel Streeter|

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Mel Streeter was born in Riverside, California in 1931. He attended the University of Oregon on a basketball scholarship and was the second African-American basketball player at Oregon after declining an offer by legendary basketball coach John Wooden to attend UCLA, because UCLA did not have an architecture program. Streeter graduated with a bachelor’s degree in architecture in 1955.

At the University of Oregon, Streeter was enrolled in the United States Army ROTC program. After serving as a second lieutenant in the transport unit at Ft. Lawton, Washington from 1955 to 1957,  he stayed in Seattle to raise a family and tried finding work at local architectural firms. He struck out 22 times before he finally found work with Paul Hayden Kirk and Fred Bassetti.

In 1967, Streeter opened the third black-owned architecture firm in Seattle. In the 1970s, he teamed with Paul Dermanis to form Streeter/Dermanis. By the early 1990s, the two partners had split and Streeter created Streeter & Associates Architects. The firm is known for projects such as Auburn City Hall, the Federal Aviation Administration Regional Headquarters and several buildings at Naval Station Everett in Everett, Washington.

Some of the firm’s community facilities include John Muir Elementary School, the Rainier Beach High School Performance Hall and the African American Academy. He also designed a 64-unit senior housing complex for Mount Zion Baptist Church and was part of the Safeco Field, Qwest Stadium, and SeaTac airport design teams.

A pillar of the black community in Seattle, he was a Seattle Planning Commissioner. He was a founding member of the AIA Seattle Diversity Roundtable and the Tabor 100. He was active in the professional black men’s organization, the Breakfast Group. As a black architect, Streeter opened doors for other architects of color and some of the city’s best known architects.

Author Profile

Donald King was born in Port Huron, Michigan in 1949, the youngest of six children of Ernestine Knox-King. He began working in architecture at the age of seventeen and worked his way, in various firms, through undergraduate and graduate studies with the help of an AIA/Ford Foundation Scholarship. He received his Master of Architecture degree from the University of California at Los Angeles and has a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree, with a concentration in Interior Architecture, from Wayne State University in Detroit.

Donald King is President and CEO of Donald King Architects, a 28 member firm in Seattle. He has nearly 40 years of professional experience in the planning and design of human service facilities and affordable housing and has led DKA in the planning and design of over 350 successful projects. He has been a member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA) since 1979 and was elevated to the AIA College of Fellows in 2000. He is one of approximately 2,200 members of the prestigious College of Fellows and one of approximately 50 African American Fellows. His writings on planning, design and architectural practice have been published in numerous books and periodicals.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

King, D. (2007, January 21). Mel Streeter (1931-2006). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/streeter-mel-1931-2006/

Source of the Author's Information:

“Architect, ‘life mentor’ Mel Streeter dead at 75” by Sam Bennett, Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce, June 15, 2006 and “Streeter, pioneering architect, dead at 75” by Athima Chansanchai, Seattle Post Intelligencer, Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Further Reading