When reviewing Warner's Pierce School in Brookline, Massachusetts, Boston Globe architecture critic Robert Campbell described it as a "kind of inaccurate imitation of a Bavarian castle" that is nonetheless a "relaxed and personal" design that, rather than following Sullivan's maxim that "form follows function," embraces the "fact that form also has all kinds of symbolic meanings for all kinds of people."[5]
Warner is best remembered for his role in the reconfiguration of downtown Providence towards the end of the twentieth century. In 1981 a group of three architects, Friedrich St. Florian, Irving B. Haynes and Warner, devised the original scheme for what would become Waterplace Park. This was in response to the recently approved Capital Center plan, which the three saw as offering nothing meaningful to the public realm. This led to a formal study by Warner's firm in 1984 and ultimately Waterplace Park was completed in 1994.[6] For his work at Waterplace Warner was awarded a 1997 Presidential Award for Design Excellence from President Bill Clinton. Warner also had a role in other important elements of Providence's so-called "Renaissance," including the Manchester Street Generating Station repowering, completed in 1996, and the Providence River Bridge, completed in 2007. Warner was active in his practice, William D. Warner Architects and Planners, until his death.[2]
Warner was married to Margaret Hansen. He had five children from two previous marriages.[1] In the 1970s they purchased Locust Valley Farm in Exeter, where he would live and work for the rest of his life, building a house on the property and moving his practice into Lawton's Mill. He died on August 27, 2012, at the age of 83.[2][9] In 2013 his work was the subject of a posthumous exhibition organized by the Rhode Island chapter of the AIA.[3]
^ abcWilliam H. Jordy, Buildings of Rhode Island (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004)
^Arthur B. Mazmanian, The Structure of Praise: A Design Study. Architecture for Religion in New England from the 17th Century to the Present (Beacon Press, 1970): 95.
^College Hill Historic District NRHP Registration Form (1970)
^"15 Bancroft Road," Andover Historic Preservation, no date. Accessed February 9, 2023.
^ abcWilliam McKenzie Woodward and Edward F. Sanderson, Providence: A Citywide Survey of Historic Resources, ed. David Chase (Providence: Rhode Island Historical Preservation Commission, 1986)