Rob Quigley, 2026
The first oil embargo and fuel crises happened in late 1973 just as I was starting my practice. The lines to access gas stations stretched for blocks and shocked the general public.
That event exposed the vulnerability of our country and the finite nature of our natural resources. While it was absolutely clear to our elected leadership and everyone else that if we kept soiling in our own nest, the path would eventually lead to the self-destruction of our human race. This was long before the Republican Party decided that caring for the planet was a political issue. Richard Nixon was among the first to advocate and implement sustainable legislation.
Yet as soon as the crisis passed, Americans went right back to doing what they were doing: poisoning with enthusiasm.
There were exceptions however, and our office was one of them. This event and the crisis itself were a wake up call for me personally.
I was beginning work on the design of the Cohen residence in Del Mar at the time of the embargo. I’m embarrassed to remember that it was the client, not me, that suggested we build a solar house.
I discovered that I and the architectural profession were not trained or prepared to address the challenge. I found and devoured an old copy of Victor Olgyay’s classic Design with Climate from the 1950s. We re-educated ourselves and redirected the modest designs currently in the office with special emphasis on passive energy techniques. We rented an RV and a small group of San Diegans joined us on a drive to the Second National Solar Energy conference in Albuquerque. There were only around 200 people at the conference but the work that was being done in New Mexico was inspiring.
The Cohen Solar House became our first solar-powered project and attempt at sustainability. It was also our first nationally published work. Other designs followed in the late 70s and 80s with “passive design” experiments
incorporating innovative natural ventilation systems, rock and water thermal storage, and special “trombe” walls. Designing with “passive” sustainable concepts became integrated into the way we approached architecture. Providing abundant but seductive natural daylighting became an obsession. I was asked to teach the first sustainable architecture course at USC and lectured at many universities on the approach.
We realize that sustainability was not just about saving energy or creating comfort, but was a key to achieving our larger goals of a compelling regional architecture.
This commitment to a sustainable future has helped to define our work to the present day. The San Diego Children’s Museum, for instance, has no need for and does not contain air conditioning or heating systems in the
This commitment to a sustainable future has helped to define our work to the present day. The San Diego Children’s Museum, for instance, has no need for and does not contain air conditioning or heating systems in the main galleries. It relies on natural ventilation and passive solar design techniques to heat and cool the spaces. The Museum and Torr Kaelan, the firm’s mixed-used headquarters, may be the two most energy efficient buildings in downtown San Diego. The Ocean Discovery Institute’s Living Lab is a near-zero energy use academic building. The Sun Field Station for Stanford University was selected as one of the ten most energy efficient and environmentally sensitive buildings in the United States in 2005. The West Valley Library became the first LEED certified library in the world and the first of the firm’s multiple LEED silver-, gold- and platinum-certified projects.