John L. Volk Architectural Collection
Scope and Contents
Architectural drawings by John Volk encompass his work in Palm Beach, South Florida, the Bahamas, and throughout the United States. Artwork by Volk or draftsmen include renderings of many of these projects. Photographic materials extensively document Volk’s career and include personal photographs of Volk as a young man, with his wife Jane Volk, and social events in Palm Beach. Printed material includes periodicals that feature the work of Volk.
Dates
- 1925 - 1983
Creator
- Volk, John L. (1901-1984) (Architect, Person)
Conditions Governing Use
The Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach makes its archival collections available for non-commercial, educational, and personal use unless restricted by copyright and/or donor restrictions. The materials within the collections held by the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach Archives are intended for research, educational, or informational purposes only. Materials in these collections may be under copyright protection, and copyright restrictions may apply. Written permission must be obtained from the copyright holder and the Preservation Foundation Archives to copy, publish, or otherwise reproduce.
Biographical / Historical
John Volk was born in Graz, Austria, and immigrated to New York City at the age of nine with his family. Volk studied architecture at Columbia University and apprenticed with H.P. Knowles, a Masonic architect in New York. In 1925 he relocated to Florida during the real estate boom, and he opened his own practice there in 1926. Architect Gustav A. Mass joined as a partner from 1927-1937. He was commissioned to design over 2,000 projects during his 60 years of practicing architecture in Palm Beach. Volk’s most significant commercial projects are the Royal Poinciana Plaza and additions and renovations to the First National Bank. Outstanding among his civic projects were the Parker Playhouse in Fort Lauderdale, the Royal Poinciana Playhouse, and additions and renovations to the Everglades Club and the Bath and Tennis Club. His residential projects ranged from estates for titans of the financial world to smaller homes in new subdivisions. There is no particular style exclusively associated with Volk; he perfected many styles from Mediterranean Revival to Modern. Volk’s legacy can be found on almost every street in Palm Beach and throughout the United States and the Bahamas.
Extent
272 Linear Feet (Includes flat files, boxes, binders, and lateral files)
Language of Materials
English
Arrangement
The collection is arranged as 9 series: • Series 1: Architectural Drawings, 1921-1981 (225 linear feet) • Series 2: Artwork (2 linear feet) • Series 3: Photographic Material (9 linear feet) • Series 4: Architectural Models (2 models) • Series 5: Business Records (30 linear feet) • Series 6: Printed Material-Periodicals (3 linear feet) • Series 7: Scrapbooks (3 linear feet) • Series 8: Postcards and travel, circa 1930-1962 (.417 linear feet) • Series 9: Rare Books (15 linear feet)
Physical Location
Upstairs Archive
Physical Location
Downstairs Archive
Processing Information
This collection was processed by Shellie Labell and Janet Naughton in 2018. The collection was further processed by Marie Penny in 2021. The finding aid was created by Amanda Capote in 2022. Funding was provided by Sallie B. Phillips for the digitization of the collection.
Creator
- Volk, John L. (1901-1984) (Architect, Person)
- Title
- John L. Volk Architectural Collection Finding Aid
- Author
- Amanda Capote
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Preservation Foundation of Palm Beach Repository