Max Borges Jr. (born Max Borges Recio; July 24, 1918 – January 18, 2009),[1][2] was a Cuban-born architect, best known for his work in Havana in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved to the United States in later life.
Borges Jr. was born in Cuba, the son of Max Borges del Junco, an architect. He later studied in the United States, earning his bachelor's degree at Georgia Tech and a master's degree at the Harvard Graduate School of Design. Borges Jr. returned to Cuba and joined his father's firm, together with his brother Enrique.
Borges' style was influenced by his work with Spanish structural engineer Félix Candela who practiced in Mexico and was a specialist in lightweight concrete parabolic structures. Borges invited Candela to work with him in Cuba, and they both developed extraordinary projects.[3]Tropicana Club owner Martin Fox hired Borges to work on an expansion for the club. He produced the Acros de Cristal (Crystal Arches).[4] Previously Fox had commissioned Borges to design his Havana home, one of the first Cuban buildings to combine International Style Modernism with Colonial architecture.[5]
Other unique buildings like the 1943 Apartment Building of Max Borges-del Junco at Jovellar St. and the Club Náutico place Borges among a few modern architects of the Americas with a recognizable, original style.
After 1959 his family moved to the United States, where he remained active well into the 1980s, along with his brother Enrique, designing and building many residential and commercial buildings in the Washington Metropolitan Area.[6]
He was son of architect Max Borges del Junco, a well-known Cuban architect. His brother was architect Enrique Borges Recio, with whom he authored many works as partner. He married Mignon Olmo-Garrido (March 18, 1923–May 6, 2007) on February 5, 1944 at San Juan de Letrán Catholic Church in Havana, Cuba and they had two sons, Philip M. and Max M. Borges Olmo (also an architect).
Notable projects
Centro Médico Quirúrgico. 1948Club Náutico. 1953Edificio Anter, La Habana, 1954Max Borges Jr. House_1958
House of Santiago Claret (1941)
House of Martin Fox (1941)
Apartment Building of Max Borges del Junco (1943)
House of Paula Maza (1946)
House of Max Borges Recio (1948)
Medical and Surgical Center (Centro Medico Quirurgico) (1948)
↑Belmont Freeman. "Max Borges, 1918-2009". "The Architect's Newspaper" "The Architect's Newspaper". Archived from the original on 2009-03-14. Retrieved 2009-07-12., March 4, 2009