Abstract:
This thesis examines the architecture of Ewing H. Miller II and his significance in the
Modern movement of architecture. Miller collaborated with a colleague and psychologist,
Lawrence Wheeler, from 1958 to 1972. Their collaboration represented some of the earliest
examples of behavioral research affecting architectural design in the United States. Their first
collaboration researching the design of trucking terminals for Eastern Express, Inc. has been
cited as one of the earliest known examples of collaboration between an architect and a social
scientist. Miller and Wheeler were at the forefront of an emerging field, sometimes referred to as
Environmental Psychology in the 1960s. Miller and Wheeler's work with behavioral research and
design led to a series of residence halls at Indiana State University in Terre Haute, Indiana. Their
collaboration also influenced two university master plans, one at Indiana State University
Evansville (now University of Southern Indiana) and the University of Evansville, both in
Evansville, Indiana. Miller's acceptance of behavioral research led to a unique design philosophy
concerned with how architecture affected human behavior. Miller's architecture is significant
because it represents a change in design theory in the Modern movement of architecture.