Johan Richter (architect)

Johan Vondriak Richter (4 December 1925 in Aarhus – 18 April 1998) was a Danish architect, royal city engineer and professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture.

Johan Richter
Born(1925-04-12)12 April 1925
Aarhus, Denmark
Died18 April 1998(1998-04-18) (aged 73)
Aarhus, Denmark
NationalityDanish
Alma materRoyal Danish Academy of Fine Arts
OccupationArchitect

Richter was originally trained as a carpenter but in 1947 he became a building constructor and in 1951 he graduated from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. He was initially employed at C. F. Møller Architects where he worked until 1955. However, while still working for C.F. Møller he opened the architects practice Richter & Gravers in 1953 with Arne Gravers. The company was later changed to Kjær & Richter when Gravers left the company and Werner Kjær became a new partner. One of the major works of the partnership was the Aarhus Concert Hall. Johan Richter was professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture from 1965 to 1985, functioned as the royal city engineer until 1996 and was the architect at Aarhus Cathedral from 1989.[1][2]

In 1989 Richter was made an Honorary Fellow at the American Institute of Architects.

Awards

  • 1965: Danish Wood Award (for Århus Statsgymnasium),
  • 1965: Eckersberg Medaillen
  • 1988: C.F. Hansen Medaillen
  • 1990: Thorsen-Prisen
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gollark: *magic*
gollark: I think that it'd basically create the following lists:0 1 1 21 1 2 3 (shifted ahead by one)and then sum them to1 2 3 5
gollark: You know, given the existence of the automatic pointfree-izer thing... we need a thing to automatically run this on entire projects.
gollark: ```haskell(....) :: ((a1 -> (a1 -> b) -> c) -> c) -> (((a1 -> b) -> a1 -> (a1 -> b) -> a1 -> (a1 -> b) -> c) -> a1 -> b) -> (a2 -> (a1 -> b) -> a1 -> (a1 -> b) -> a1 -> (a1 -> b) -> c) -> a2 -> c(....) = ((.) .)<$> (*>) (. (.)) (<*>) . ((.) >>= (. ((.) . (.)))) . ((>>) >> (<$>))```

References

  1. "Johan Richter" (in Danish). Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon. Archived from the original on 26 April 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  2. "Johan Richter" (in Danish). Gyldendals Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 26 April 2016. Retrieved 25 April 2016.


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