{"id":14853,"date":"2019-01-24T10:25:30","date_gmt":"2019-01-24T15:25:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/archdesign.utk.edu\/?p=14853"},"modified":"2025-01-30T11:19:19","modified_gmt":"2025-01-30T16:19:19","slug":"farewell-french","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/archdesign.utk.edu\/farewell-french\/","title":{"rendered":"College Bids Farewell to Bob French"},"content":{"rendered":"
There is nothing pretentious about Bob French.\u00a0 One only has to meet him to understand that. \u00a0He is generous and kind.\u00a0 He served our college for 44 years and taught literally hundreds of young designers how to become better at their chosen craft, but he would be the last to brag about it.<\/p>\n His humility is practically legendary, so it\u2019s no surprise that upon deciding to retire, he asked that the college make no announcement about it.\u00a0 We honored that request, but we simply must acknowledge his contributions to our college and his devotion to his students.<\/p>\n Bob French graduated from the University of Tennessee New School of Architecture, the predecessor to today\u2019s College of Architecture and Design, in 1972.\u00a0 He started working as a part-time designer for an architect named Robert B. Church, who served as dean and endowed a lecture series that is going strong today.\u00a0 Bob also worked as a designer\/detailer for McCarty Bullock Church Holsaple Architects and other local firms and became principal designer for his own projects.<\/p>\n In 1974, he stepped back onto the UT campus to become an instructor in our School of Architecture and continued to design professionally.\u00a0 He became a licensed architect in 1978.<\/p>\n Bob worked as a designer on TVA\u2019s office building and as a team leader for the U.S. Army Forcom installation, an energy reduction initiative by TVA.<\/p>\n For more than 40 years, he taught in the college he called \u201chome\u201d and continued his professional practice, working on projects that include private residences and serving as a master planner and designer for the Kingston Project.<\/p>\n One notable project Bob pursued for his students and college is Lone Oaks Farm.\u00a0 For years, Bob worked to align our college with UT\u2019s new and multi-year development in West Tennessee.\u00a0 Because of his and others’ efforts, our students now are part of the project and work alongside two firms chosen by the state of Tennessee to design the multipurpose campus.<\/p>\n Beginning in 2014, Bob and fellow Architecture professor, Jennifer Akerman, led students in the college to design and largely build the acclaimed Beardsley Farm Education Center for ¿ì»îÊÓƵ\u2019s urban farm.<\/p>\n It\u2019s that kind of dedication to students and vision for ensuring meaningful experiences for them that set Bob French apart for 44 years.<\/p>\n During those years, students chose him for awards, including the Tau Sigma Delta Outstanding Faculty Award and the Tau Sigma Delta\/Bob Holsaple Outstanding Faculty Award.\u00a0 He served the college on various committees and helped design the School of Architecture\u2019s second-year design program.<\/p>\n But you\u2019d likely never hear him tout these accomplishments.<\/p>\n His enduring and valuable presence in the college is celebrated today, and his physical presence\u2014including the ever-present hat\u2014already is missed.<\/p>\n We thank Bob for his devotion to students, the profession and his alma mater and for his friendship.\u00a0\u00a0 We wish him all the best in retirement.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Read more about the Beardsley Farm Education Center<\/a><\/p>\n<\/figure>Congratulations to Robert C. French, our faculty member, friend and colleague, who retired at the end of 2018.<\/p>\n
We call him \u201cBob.\u201d<\/h3>\n
Learn more!<\/h3>\n