1938 in architecture
The year 1938 in architecture involved some significant events.
| |||
---|---|---|---|
Buildings and structures |
Events
- First woman elected to Royal Institute of British Architects, Josephine Miller.
Buildings and structures
Buildings opened
- July – Saltdean Lido and Ocean Hotel, Saltdean, East Sussex, England, both designed by R.W.H. Jones.
- October 22 – Oxford Playhouse, Oxford, England, designed by Edward Maufe.[1]
- October 29 – City Hall, Norwich, England, designed by C. H. James and S. R. Pierce.
- November 14 – Lions Gate Bridge in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Buildings completed
- The Reich Chancellery in Berlin, designed by Albert Speer (rebuilt).
- Great Mosque of Asmara in Italian Eritrea, designed by Guido Ferrazza.
- Church of the Epiphany, Gipton, Leeds, England, designed by Nugent Cachemaille-Day.
- Metro Theatre (Toronto), designed by Kaplan and Sprachman.
- Finsbury Health Centre, London, designed by Berthold Lubetkin and the Tecton Group.
- Metropolitan Water Board Laboratories, London, designed by Howard Robertson.
- Palace of Fine and Decorative Arts, Treasure Island, San Francisco Bay, California, USA, designed by George W. Kelham and William Peyton Day.
- Palace of Justice, Lima, Peru.
- City Hall, Mar del Plata, Argentina, designed by Alejandro Bustillo.
- Manchester Town Hall Extension, England, designed by Vincent Harris in 1927.
- São Bento Palace, Lisbon, Portugal.
- Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, Netherlands, designed by Henry van de Velde.
- Helsinki Olympic Stadium, Finland, designed by Yrjö Lindegren and Toivo Jäntti.
- Brackenfell (house), Brampton, Carlisle, England, designed by Leslie Martin and Sadie Speight.[2]
- The Homewood (house) near Esher, Surrey, England, designed by Patrick Gwynne (for his parents).
- Charters House, Berkshire, England, designed by Adie, Button and Partners.
- Hamstone House, St George's Hill, Weybridge, Surrey, designed by Ian Forbes.
- Middleton Park, Oxfordshire, England, the last great country house designed by Edwin Lutyens (with his son Robert).
- Houses in Hampshire, Sussex and at Eton, Berkshire in England by Marcel Breuer and F. R. S. Yorke.
- Gropius House, Lincoln, Massachusetts, designed by Walter Gropius with Marcel Breuer.
- Belvedere Court (apartments) in East Finchley, London, designed by Ernst L. Freud.
- Josephine M. Hagerty House, Cohasset, Massachusetts, designed by Walter Gropius with Marcel Breuer.
- Luma Tower, built as British Luma Co-Operative Electric Lamp factory, Glasgow, designed by Cornelius Armour.
- Fiat Tagliero Building, Asmara, Italian Eritrea, designed by Giuseppe Pettazzi.
Other
- Construction work begins on
- Mark Keppel High School in Alhambra, California, designed by Marston & Maybury.
- Council House, Bristol, England, designed by Vincent Harris.
Publications
- Lewis Mumford – The Culture of Cities
Awards
- AIA Gold Medal – Paul Philippe Cret
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Ivar Tengbom
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Henry Bernard
Births
- April 16 – Wolf Hilbertz, German-born futurist architect, inventor and marine scientist (died 2007)
- May 12 – Terry Farrell, English architect, designer of the KK100 and SIS Building
- July 10 – Paul Andreu, French airport architect (died 2018)
- July 14 – Moshe Safdie, Israeli/Canadian architect, urban designer, educator, theorist and author
- September 3 – Richard MacCormac, British architect (died 2014)
- November 30 – Andrea Branzi, Italian architect and designer
- December 30 – Susan Maxman, née Abel, American architect
Deaths
- February 25 – W. D. Caröe, English-born ecclesiastical architect (born 1857)
- July 2 – John James Burnet, Scottish architect (born 1857)
- October 30 – Charles Klauder, American architect (born 1872)
- December 24 – Bruno Taut, German-born architect and urban planner (born 1880)
- December 25 – Theodor Fischer, German architect (born 1862)
gollark: And I think some highish-voltage screen power line running beside the screen's data lines, on some MacBooks too.
gollark: Such as MacBooks beind built with entirely inadequate cooling.
gollark: They're unrepairable and often have really stupid flaws.
gollark: Stupid "trusted computing"...
gollark: I mean, there's Google "Safety"Net and stuff.
References
- Sherwood, Jennifer; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1974). The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire. Penguin Books. p. 324. ISBN 0-14-071045-0.
- Twentieth Century Society (2017). 100 Houses 100 Years. London: Batsford. ISBN 978-1-84994-437-3.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.