Francisco Luis Porrata-Doría Gutierre de Pando, sometimes shortened to Francisco Luis Porrata-Doria Pando, was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, on 4 May 1890. His parents were Luis Porrata-Doría, mayor of Ponce in 1898, and Ana Gutierre de Pando. He grew up and was raised in Ponce. In 1909 he graduated from Ponce High School.
Returning to Puerto Rico, Porrata-Doria became director of Public Works for the Municipality of Ponce from 1912 to 1916. His most important public work at the time was Plaza Degetau.
Personal life
In 1915 he married Isabel Armstrong Pou, daughter of Carlos Armstrong. They had two children, Francisco Carlos Porrata-Doria Armstrong and José Luis Porrata-Doria Armstrong, both of whom became physicians. He remarried in 1939, after the death of his wife the previous year. His second wife was Gloria de la Pila Valdecilla, daughter of Dr. Manuel de la Pila Iglesias. They had two children, Manuel Luis Porrata-Doria de la Pila, an engineer, and Arturo Francisco Porrata-Doria de la Pila, a lawyer.
Private practice
From 1916 to 1935, Porrata-Doria practiced as an engineer and architect in Ponce. During this time, Porrata Doria designed 12 of his 15 churches as well as numerous prestigious homes. Among these churches where those in the towns of Barranquitas, Jayuya, Maunabo, Patillas, Peñuelas, and Villalba. Among Porrata-Doria's works are Banco Crédito y Ahorro Ponceño, the Ponce Cathedral, Banco de Ponce, and the Fernando Luis Toro Home. All of these are also listed in the National Register of Historic Places. Also by Porrata-Doria is the Gomez Residence, also listed in the NRHP. Porrata Doria's works are exhibited at the Museum of Puerto Rican Architecture. He also designed the famed Teatro Fox Delicias, the Hotel Meliá, the El Cometa Building, the San Lucas Hospital and the Dr. Pila Clinic. He also designed the Mario Mercado Castle, atop a hill in Guayanilla. In addition, and also surrounding plaza Las Delicias, Porrata-Doria designed the Forteza Building and the Gonzalez Building, long-time home of Farmacias Gonzalez and today a mixed-commercial location.
In 1936 Porrata-Doría became project engineer for the Puerto Rico Reconstruction Administration. He was also consulting engineer for the city of Ponce. He participated in the design and rebuilding of Teatro La Perla, the Ponce Public Library, and the Abraham Lincoln and José Celso Barbosa elementary schools. From 1942 to 1956 he worked as official architect for the engineering division of the Autoridad de Fuentes Fluviales, today the Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica. During this time he also designed a church inHato Rey, and the home residence of Antonio S. Luchetti, the director of the Authority. This last one, commissioned by the government of Puerto Rico, caused so much public criticism that the home was sold without Luchetti ever living it.
Last years and death
In 1966, Porrata-Doría left public service and returned to private practice once again. During this second period in the private sector, he designed many luxurious homes, the González y Compañía building across from Parque de Bombas, the clinic of Dr. Fernández García and his last two churches. During his last years, Porrata-Doría developed a hobby: he designed homes without any plan or intention to have them built. He died in Ponce on 2 September 1971 at the age of 81, as a result of an "acute myocardial infection." He was buried at Cementerio Católico San Vicente de Paul.
His contributions earned him a place at the Tricentennial Park where one of its three plaza is named after him. Porrata-Doría is also honored at Ponce's Park of the Illustrious Ponce Citizens at another plaza within the same park, the "Plaza de los Ponceños Ilustres", for his contributions to the field of architecture.