It would be the decisive moment in Wilcots’ life. By saying yes, he ended up devoting more than 20 years to helping Kahn build the new capital...The meetings would cause him to move to Philadelphia, a place that at the time seemed to him far less welcoming to African Americans than Dhaka. When Kahn suffered a fatal heart attack in 1974...Wilcots would assume the awesome task of finishing a Louis Kahn masterpiece. — Inga Saffron for the Philadelphia Inquirer
This article sheds light on the story of Henry Wilcots (now 89 years old), the much overlooked architect who was responsible for completing Louis Kahn's Dhaka National Assembly masterpiece. Dubbed as the “Kahn whisperer” by fellow colleagues, the calm-and-collected Wilcots was able to have a smooth working relationship with Kahn, the article says.
3 Comments
Really good article; I'd have never known otherwise.
Was Wilcots featured in My Architect? I am not sure.
As Kahn's onsite representative I know that there were numerous architects making architectural and engineering design and construction decisions/processes made in Dacca East Pakistan (now Bangladeshi) that have yet to be shared or acknowledged.
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