Obituary: Neil Nehrbass, 66, Cajundome Architect June 2, 1998 Lafayette County Louisiana Archives News File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: N.O.V.A. N.O.V.A. OrleansArchives@hotmail.com July 13, 2005, 10:01 pm ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/la/lafiles.htm ************************************************ Neil Nehrbass, 66, Cajundome Architect June 2, 1998 Times Picayune June 2, 1998 Neil Martin Nehrbass, who designed the Cajundome and other prominent buildings in and around Lafayette, died Sunday at his home in Lafayette. He was 66. Mr. Nehrbass, who was an architect from 1953 until his retirement in 1991, designed many schools, churches and homes in the Lafayette area. Among his best-known buildings are the Diocese of Lafayette Chancery Building, the Lafayette Natural History Museum and Planetarium, Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Church and Acadian Elementary School. He also designed a few buildings in the New Orleans area. A 1976 article about Mr. Nehrbass in The States-Item said he had been "quietly practicing intelligent, humane architecture in south Louisiana" for 20 years but remained "practically unknown in his home state, where he is a sure contender for 'best architect.' " It said he had "carved out a comfortable, somewhat eccentric professional niche" in Lafayette, "a town founded by his mother's family and where his father was the first resident architect." "Perhaps accustomed to relative obscurity," the article said, Mr. Nehrbass "has survived on the personal satisfaction of accepting work he could control - to create careful, natural, warm buildings that people enjoy being in without knowing exactly why." Mr. Nehrbass, a lifelong resident of Lafayette, graduated from Staunton Military Academy in Virginia and Louisiana State University. He was an Air Force veteran of the Korean War. He was a visiting professor at the University of Southwestern Louisiana and Tulane University. Survivors include his wife, Janet Himbert Nehrbass; two sons, Kim Martin and Seth Martin Nehrbass; two daughters, Heidi Nehrbass Alpha and Tanya Nehrbass Schulze; a brother, Douglas J. Nehrbass; and 10 grandchildren. A Mass will be said today at 10 a.m. at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Lafayette. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery. Delhomme Funeral Home in Lafayette is in charge of arrangements.