Belli also worked for Perkins and Will, briefly for Graham, Anderson, Probst & White, and served in Guam as a member of the United States Navy Construction Battalion (the Seabees) during World War II.
The major buildings were designed by Chicago architect Edo Belli, whose firm conducted a longstanding collaboration with the Daughters of Charity in several states.
Edo | Edo period | Edo State | Willam Belli | Edo Maajka | Melvin Belli | Giulio Belli | EDO Corporation | Ini Edo | Edo language | Edo Bertoglio | Arion-Edo Foundation | Skull of ''C. belli'' ROM 5436, type of ''C.'' "brevirostris", on display at the Royal Ontario Museum | Missa in tempore belli | Kyoko Edo | Giuseppe Gioachino Belli | Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum | Edo River | Edo Period | Edo people | Edo o Kiru | Edo no Temari Uta II | Edo College | Edo clan | Edo Buma | Edo Belli | Edō | EDO | Casus belli | Carlos Germán Belli |