1948 in architecture
The year 1948 in architecture involved some significant events.
  | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Buildings and structures+... | 
Events
    
- Le Modulor by Le Corbusier is published.
 
Buildings and structures
    

V. C. Morris Gift Shop – Frank Lloyd Wright's prototype for the Guggenheim Museum
Buildings
    
- September 10 – The Tripler Army Medical Center in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States is dedicated.[1]
 - December – Carswell House in Newark, Delaware, by Edward Durell Stone, completed.[2]
 - Mile High Stadium in Denver, Colorado completed.
 - V. C. Morris Gift Shop (later, Xanadu Gallery) in San Francisco, by Frank Lloyd Wright.[3]
 - Morannedd Café (later, Dylan's), Criccieth Esplanade, Wales, by Clough Williams-Ellis, built (approximate date).
 - Mampong Teacher's Training College and Prempeh College, Kumasi, both in Ghana, by Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew.
 - Burleigh Primary School, Cheshunt, England, by Mary Crowley, opened.
 - Equitable Building (Portland, Oregon), by Pietro Belluschi, completed.[4]
 - Holy Family Old Cathedral (Anchorage, Alaska), by Augustine A. Porreca, is completed.
 - Calvert Manor apartment building in Arlington, Virginia, by Mihran Mesrobian, built.[5]
 - Bachman House in Chicago, remodeling by Bruce Goff, completed.
 - Ledbetter House in Norman, Oklahoma, by Bruce Goff, completed.
 - Elkay Apartments in Los Angeles, California, by Richard Neutra, built.
 - Herman T. Mossberg Residence in South Bend, Indiana, by Frank Lloyd Wright, built.
 - Herbert and Katherine Jacobs Second House in Madison, Wisconsin, by Frank Lloyd Wright, completed.
 - Jack Lamberson House in Oskaloosa, Iowa, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, built.
 - Haines Shoe House in Hallam, Pennsylvania, built.[6]
 
Awards
    
- AIA Gold Medal – Charles Donagh Maginnis
 - Olympic gold medal – Adolf Hoch of Austria for Ski jumping hill on the Kobenzl
 - Olympic silver medal – Alfred Rinesch of Austria for Watersports centre in Karinthia
 - Olympic bronze medal – Nils Olsson of Sweden for Baths and sporting hall in Gothenburg
 - RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Auguste Perret
 
Births
    
- March 15 – Gavin Stamp, British architectural historian (died 2017)
 - October 6 – Ken Yeang, Malaysian ecoarchitect
 - December 3 – Maxwell Hutchinson, English architect
 - Louis D. Astorino, American architect
 - Miguel Cabrera Cabrera, Spanish architect and politician working in the Canaries
 - Michael Sorkin, American architect and theorist (died 2020)
 
Deaths
    
- January 19
- Ignjat Fischer, Croatian architect (born 1870)
 - Tony Garnier, French architect (born 1869)
 
 - January 22 – Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas, English architect (born 1868)
 - February 2 – Sir Charles Herbert Reilly, English architect and teacher (born 1874)
 - March 29 – Olev Siinmaa, Estonian-Swedish architect (born 1881)
 - June 16 – Horace Field, English architect (born 1861)
 - August 1 – George Skipper, English architect (born 1856)
 - August 20 – Emery Roth, Hungarian-born American architect (born 1871)
 - September 3 – Frank Mills Andrews, American architect (born 1867)
 - October – Benedict Williamson, English-born architect and Roman Catholic priest (born 1868)
 - October 1 – Adolf Szyszko-Bohusz, Polish architect (born 1883)
 - October 27 – Albert Randolph Ross, American architect (born 1868)
 - John Robert Dillon, American architect
 
References
    
- Tripler Inpatient's Guide. Honolulu, Hawaii: Tripler Army Medical Centre. 2007. pp. 1–35.
 - Maguire, Ryan (2018). "Preserving History". UDaily. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
 - "Frank Lloyd Wright's San Francisco Gift Shop Meets Iconic Italian Design". Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. 2017-10-05. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
 - Leland, Roth (February 26, 2020). "Equitable Building". The Oregon Encyclopedia. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
 - "Calvert Manor". Projects & Planning. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
 - "The Haines Shoe House". Retrieved March 22, 2020.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
