HYLAND + HIGHFILL: AN UNTOLD STORY OF MODERNISM IN RICHMOND

A Two-Day Event | April 9 & April 11, 2026


APRIL 9 | OPENING NIGHT CONVERSATION

Hyland + Highfill: An Untold Story of Modernism in Richmond

5:15 PM – 7:45 PM St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church 10627 Patterson Avenue, Richmond, Virginia

Richmond has a modernist story most people don't know. On April 9th, Modern Richmond will have an incredible panel who will be sharing this story through an evening of conversation, history, and family memories that brings one of Richmond's greatest architectural legacies into the light.

THE STORY

In the late 1930s, a young Frederick "Bud" Hyland sat beside Frank Lloyd Wright at the legendary Taliesin estate in Wisconsin, absorbing a philosophy of design that was radical, human, and deeply connected to the land. He brought that vision home to Richmond and spent 30 years proving that modern architecture belonged here. Beginning with his own Usonian-style home in Southside in 1949, Bud designed more than 20 residences and six landmark commercial buildings across the city, each one a gentle but firm argument that Richmond deserved something bolder and more alive.

Then Page Highfill walked through his door.

A young Virginia Tech architecture graduate brimming with ideas, Page joined Bud's firm in 1960 and never looked back. Under Bud's mentorship he grew into a gifted architect in his own right and by 1967, an equal partner. As Hyland & Highfill, the two men designed beautiful modern homes, schools, and sacred spaces.

When Bud retired, he handed everything to Page with grace and trust, a moment Page described for the rest of his life as a father-son bond. The firm grew, but Page's dedication to modernism never wavered. From the Maybeury Road homes of 1964 to the award-winning St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church in 1973, to the home he designed for himself in 1988, Page Highfill's fingerprints are on this city in ways most Richmonders have never fully appreciated.

Until now.


THE EVENING

Join us for an extraordinary opening conversation bringing together a panel to tell this story. 

Our panel includes architectural historian Jody Lahendro, FAIA and Patrick Rand, FAIA-Professor Emeritus of Architecture NC State along with Bryan Highfill,  Page's grandson who will share memories and perspectives that history books simply can't capture. The evening will be moderated by Modern Richmond Chair Maggie Schubert, AIA, LEED AP BD+C and Past Chair Trey Tyler.


EVENING SCHEDULE

5:15 PM: Doors Open

5:30 PM: Welcome & Introductions

5:35 PM – 6:05 PM: Conversation with Jody Lahendro & Maggie Schubert

6:20 PM – 6:35 PM: Break

6:35 PM – 7:15 PM: Conversation with Jody Lahendro, Patrick Rand, Bryan Highfill, Maggie Schubert & Trey Tyler

7:15 PM – 7:35 PM: Audience Questions

7:45 PM: Closing Remarks & Event Concludes

* The schedule is subject to change


A NOTE ON OUR VENUE

This evening takes place at St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church, 10627 Patterson Avenue, Richmond, Virginia — one of the crown jewels of Page Highfill's career and the very building that earned him two of his most prestigious design honors. To sit inside it while hearing his story told is an experience we think you'll never forget.


A NOTE ON PARKING

Parking is limited. If you are a ticket holder please carpool if possible. More detailed information will be provided to all ticket holders ahead of the event.


This is more than a lecture. It's history. It's architecture. It is a family legacy. It's Richmond's modern story told in full.

- EVENT SOLD OUT -

HYLAND + HIGHFILL: AN UNTOLD STORY OF MODERNISM IN RICHMOND Property Tour  | April 11, 2026


The untold story of Modernism in Richmond doesn't just live in lectures and history books. It lives in the buildings themselves. On April 11, we're taking you inside them.

Modern Richmond invites you on a rare and intimate tour of five properties that tell the full arc of a modernist legacy — beginning with the firm's earliest residential work in the early 1960s, and carrying through to two remarkable properties designed independently by Page Highfill in the 1970s and late 1980s.


THE PROPERTIES — IN THE ORDER THEY WERE BUILT

Three neighboring homes on Maybeury Road completed before the formal Hyland & Highfill partnership was even established in 1967,  an early sign of Page's extraordinary promise as a young architect under Bud's mentorship. One home has special meaning, it was Page's own home, where he and his beloved wife Kate built a life full of family, friends, and faith. Walking through these three side-by-side homes is a rare chance to see a young modernist finding his voice bold, confident, and already fully formed.

St. Bartholomew Episcopal Church on Patterson Avenue is one of the most celebrated projects of Page's independent career, this stunning sacred space earned two prestigious design awards one from the Guild of Religious Architects and one from the Virginia State AIA Chapter. It stands as a testament to Page's extraordinary talent and vision as an architect, and powerful proof that the very best of the Hyland & Highfill legacy continued long after their partnership ended.

Twenty-four years after the Maybeury Road homes, Page designed a home on Flagstation Road for he and his family, this second personal home is living proof that his passion for modernism never wavered. Two homes built for the same man, a quarter century apart, telling the story of an architect who didn't just build modern architecture, he lived it.


A NOTE ON PARKING

Parking is limited at all venues. If you are a ticket holder please carpool if possible. More detailed information, including parking guidance and tour logistics, will be provided to all ticket holders ahead of the event.


Tickets: $35 + Eventbrite fee. Tickets go on sale TUESDAY, March 10th at 10:00am