Tibbals, Crumley, and Musson (formerly Todd Tibbals and Associates) was a Columbus architecture firm that existed from 1935 until Tibbals' death in 1988. They contributed to urban renewal efforts in the Columbus area and are best known for the Drake, Ohio State's most recently demolished building (as of 2024).
Todd Tibbals, founding partner of the firm, graduated from The Ohio State University in 1932, receiving his bachelor's degree in architecture. He began practicing in Columbus in 1935, designing his own home in Grandview in 1939. By 1942, he was joined by partner Noverre Musson, who also graduated from Ohio State and studied under Frank Lloyd Wright. Partner George Crumley joined the firm in 1945, after which it was renamed to "Tibbals, Crumley, and Musson."
Tibbals, Crumley, and Musson mostly operated in the Modernist and Brutalist styles. One of their largest commissions, the Colonial Hills subdivision in Worthington, reflects the boom in suburban population from white flight. (It even had a restrictive covenant forbidding minorities from purchasing houses there.) They also contributed to urban renewal efforts through slum clearance. On Ohio State's campus, they designed the Drake, a Brutalist student union on west campus.