David Kahler (born February 14, 1937) is an American architect and photographer who led the Milwaukee-based firm Kahler Slater for the bulk of his career.[2]
Over the next decades, Kahler Slater was involved in a number of projects, the most significant being the first extension to the Milwaukee Art Museum in 1975, the Haggerty Museum of Art building on the campus of Marquette University, which Kahler took over from O'Neil Ford after his death in 1982, and the renovation of the Wisconsin State Capitol.[9][10]
While Thomas Slater left the firm in 1996, Kahler undertook another major project: the Milwaukee Art Museum’s Quadracci Pavilion, which he helped design in collaboration with Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava.[9][11] Following the completion of the building in 2001, Kahler left Milwaukee to start a consulting firm and relocated to Pittsboro, North Carolina.[12]
↑Filler, Martin (2007). Makers of Modern Architecture: From Frank Lloyd Wright to Frank Gehry. New York: New York Review Books. p.293. ISBN978-1590172278.
↑Kamin, Blair (2011). Terror and Wonder: Architecture in a Tumultuous Age. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p.133. ISBN978-0226423128.
↑Morin, Jill J. (2010). Better Make It Real: Creating Authenticity in an Increasingly Fake World. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. pp.156–157. ISBN978-0313376818.
↑Marti, Yance (2016). "Architects". Encyclopedia of Milwaukee. Milwaukee, WI: University of Wisconsin. Retrieved July 23, 2025.