Ralph M. Alley was an architect in Anchorage from the 1960s until 1986, when he relocated to California. He worked for larger firms at first, then in his own practice and later with business partners. In 1968 when he launched his own firm, Big Oil was ramping up its Alaska investment and a wild time ensued for four decades until the current hangover phase.
My dad had mentioned Alley before, and they were about the same age and were in Architecture school together at the University of Idaho. Ralph was gifted and stood out amongst his contemporaries, but with a good temperament and enough business sense to be able to succeed. Somebody who worked for him once told me, "He was a good architect. Some of his designs were a little weird" -- going on to imply that he was a decent role model and with a great grasp of the essentials [how to wrangle a contractor; how to get projects built the way they were envisioned and so forth].
Ralph was a design guru of Anchorage, in the way that Mark Ivy has been -- and Mike Mense, Catherine Call, Bruce Williams and many others, each in their own fashion. The clients who were tuned into what Ralph was doing were drawn to him implicitly, and he commanded respect by being thorough and attentive. I imagine when he told them he was planning a tapered, oval 14 foot high, skylight-topped light well at the peak of the living room ceiling, his judgment was not questioned.
Any great artist notices details at a level far beyond what ordinary humans take in. In Alley's case that translated to an intricate knowledge and understanding of quality of daylight on a daily, seasonal and annual basis; so unique to polar regions. A light quality that is stunning and fleeting. And this study became foundational to his design response to a site.
What I really appreciate about his work is its variety. He didn't have a "firm signature" or a certain approach that he mined. Like the musicians I most admire, he didn't stay put; rather, pursued many styles and conceptual frameworks and a truly individual approach to each project.
Some of the larger projects he completed survive relatively intact -- the Captain Cook Hotel, Evergreen Memorial Chapel downtown, and Fairview Recreation Center among them.
In 1999, Alley returned to Anchorage and conducted a tour of some of his projects. The tour concentrated on residential work. In some cases we got to look at the inside and outside of the house.
I was on the tour in 1999 and took a few photos.