A Boston lawyer with a wide-ranging corporate career who specialized in working with
architects. He was a partner and then managing partner at Hill and Barlow for 45 years,
retiring in 2002.
He was one of the country's pre-eminent lawyers in architecture and construction law. He
was awarded the American Institute of Architects' Allied Professions Medal in 1975 for
outstanding achievement in a non-design profession and taught and published widely on
the subject.
Born in Boston in 1932 and educated at Harvard College and Harvard Law School, he joined the law firm of Hill and Barlow and after a leave to serve on the Massachusetts Crime
Commission returned to become a partner in 1966. He traveled to the Middle East on
behalf of The Architects Collaborative in connection with a project for the University of
Baghdad in 1959. By the time of his AlA award, he had represented more than 50
architectural firms as general or special counsel. Among those were Hugh Stubbins and
Associates, Shepley Bulfinch, Richardson & Abbott, Sert Jackson and Associates,
Jung/Brannen and PietroBelluschi. In 1968, he became general counsel to the National
Council of Architectural Registration Boards, a role he continued in until the early 2000s.
He also served as interim counsel to the AlA, which made him an honorary member in
1988. His practice became international in scope.
In 1972, he began teaching a course called "Legal Problems in the Construction Process" to
students in civil engineering and architecture at MIT. Thereafter he became an Adjunct
Professor of Legal Practice in Design at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design
from 1984 to 1993 and an Adjunct Professor of Studies in Professional Practice in
Architecture from 1993 to 2009.
He retired from Hill and Barlow in 2002 after 45 years during which he mentored young
lawyers and rose to become managing partner. He retired from the Graduate School of .
Design in 2010.
During his career he participated in a wide range of public-spirited activities. He founded
the Foundation for Brookline housing which sought to promote housing for black families
in the suburb in which he lived. He later served for nine years as the town's moderator.
Toward the end of his life, he was a prominent member of a mostly Canadian group
that successfully opposed the development of Liquid Natural Gas near Passamaquoddy Bay
in Maine.
A proud liberal Democrat, he was an avid sailor, reader, lover of classical music, and cooking, whose favorite activity at his summer house in St. Andrews, NB, Canada was digging for clams and foraging for chanterelles and cooking the results into wonderful concoctions. He leaves his wife of more than 50 years, Judith Thompson Sapers, his children, Jonathan, Rachel and Benjamin, and five grandchildren. Also survived by his brother, William R. Sapers, as well as nieces and nephews.
A Memorial Service will be held at a later date. For online condolences, please visit: www.bostonharborsidehome.com
Boston Harborside Home of
J.S. Waterman & Sons Waring-Langeone
617-536-4110
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