Peter Roesch (August 30, 1929 â September 24, 2018) was a GermanâÂÂAmerican modernist architect and educator active in the Chicago area. A student of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe at the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), Roesch designed several commercial and institutional buildings and taught architecture for many years, primarily in Chicago. He has been discussed in local and scholarly literature on Chicago modernism.
Roesch was born in Leipzig, Germany, on August 30, 1929. He studied architecture in Hamburg before coming to the United States as a Fulbright scholar and enrolling at the Illinois Institute of Technology, where he studied under Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and completed a master's thesis in 1956 titled A NonâÂÂDenominational Church.
After graduating, Roesch worked briefly for firms in Chicago (including a period at Skidmore, Owings & Merrill) and later practiced under Hammond & Roesch and in his own atelier. He taught architecture at IIT and the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) and was an active member of the Chicago architectural community.
Roesch taught architecture for many years, and his papers and photographic slides (including documentation related to S. R. Crown Hall) are held in the Paul V. Galvin Library at IIT.
Roesch was married to Vibeke âÂÂBibaâ Roesch for 54 years. He died in his Chicago apartment on Septemberâ¯24, 2018, aged 89.
Roesch has been described in the Chicago press and architectural circles as one of the architects who transmitted Miesian modernist principles into postâÂÂwar Chicago and suburban commercial architecture. His Villa Park bank remains a cited example of modernism applied to suburban banking architecture, and institutional archival holdings preserve his academic and teaching materials.