Trowbridge & Livingston

Trowbridge & Livingston
Practice information
FoundersBreck Trowbridge;
Goodhue Livingston
Founded1897
Dissolved1925
LocationNew York City, New York, U.S.
AffiliationsTrowbridge, Colt & Livingston

Trowbridge & Livingston was an architecture firm based in New York City, active from 1897 to 1925. The firm's partners were Breck Trowbridge and Goodhue Livingston. They were successors to the firm Trowbridge, Colt & Livingston, founded in 1894 but dissolved in 1897 when Stockton B. Colt left the partnership.

Often commissioned by well-heeled clients, much of the firm's work was built on the Upper East Side and Financial District neighborhoods of New York. The firm became known for its commercial, civic, and institutional buildings, many designed in a Beaux Arts or neoclassical style. Some examples are the B. Altman and Company Building (1905), J. P. Morgan Building (1913), and the Oregon State Capitol (1938).