In his youth, Louis Bourgeois worked as a clerk in a church contractor's office in Trois-Rivières, Quebec. Through this experience planned the construction of the Church of Saint-Wenceslas in 1892. He married Marie Tourville. His wife's medical bills caused him to go into debt, and thus he moved to Montreal to work as an apprentice sculptor to Napoléon Bourassa. Bourassa sent Bourgeois to Paris to study sculpture with his cousin Louis Philippe Hebert. Bourgeois left his studies and travelled to other countries including Italy, Greece, Egypt, and Persia.
He returned to North America in 1896, to Chicago where he worked with innovative architect Louis Sullivan. Within several years he moved to Southern California, where he designed a landmark residence in the Mission Revival style, in central Hollywood for the popular still-life painter Paul de Longpré. The 1898 house at Hollywood Boulevard and Cahuenga, with an art gallery to sell de Longpré paintings and surrounded by the expansive "Le Roi de Fleur" gardens, became a tourist destination on a P.E. Redcars line.[2] Bourgeois also taught French to de Longpré's daughters, and married one of them, Alice.
Bourgeois jointly created a design with Francis E. Dunlap and Charles L. Morgan for the 1922 Tribune Tower design competition. Their design was named an "honorable mention".[3]
Louis Bourgeois may be best known as the architect of the Baháʼí House of WorshipinWilmette, suburban Cook County, Illinois. To give ʻAbdu'l-Baha an idea of the design direction he would take, he sent a plan that he had previously submitted for the eight-sided Peace Palace and Library in The Hague.[6] In 1920 his design, revised with nine sides, was chosen for the Wilmette Baháʼí House of Worship by the delegates to the Baháʼí national convention.
Construction began in 1921. The Foundation Hall was completed in 1922, and used as a meeting place. During the 1920s he spent much time making an architectural model and constructing the complex structure, and financing his efforts to do so, through periods of illness.[1]
After a month of bad health, Louis Bourgeois died at the age of 74 on August 20, 1930.[1]
The temple of the Wilmette Baháʼí House of Worship was finally completed and dedicated in 1953.
^History of the Churches of TeaneckArchived 2008-12-05 at the Wayback Machine, Teaneck New Jersey Forty Years of Progress: 1895-1935, by Township of Teaneck, c. 1935. pp. 14-18. "The late Louis Bourgeois, famous architect and formerly of Bogert Street and Alicia Avenue, Teaneck, also was a well-known figure in the construction of a Baha'i meeting place."