Fellheimer & Wagner, 1923–1961
Alfred Fellheimer (1875–1959) joined Reed & Stem and became a partner in 1911. Shortly thereafter, Steward Wagner (1886–1958) joined the firm, and by 1923, it became known as Fellheimer & Wagner. In 1927, esteemed Hungarian Modernist, Roland Wank, was hired as their chief designer. Building on the reputation of Reed & Stem, the firm continued to design train stations, the most significant of which is the Cincinnati Union Terminal, acknowledged as the classic Art Deco station, for which the firm won the AIA Gold Medal in 1933. Fellheimer & Wagner also designed an assortment of campus buildings, notably at Queens College (Queens, NY) and Farleigh Dickinson (Teaneck, NJ), as well as corporate parks in New Jersey, such those of Johnson & Johnson and Hoffman–LaRoche.