1936 in architecture
Overview of the events of 1936 in architecture
The year 1936 in architecture involved some significant events.
Events
Buildings and structures
Buildings
Casa del Fascio (Como) , Italy
Olympic Stadium (Berlin)
Johnson Wax Headquarters , Racine, Wisconsin , designed by Frank Lloyd Wright .
Campana Factory , Batavia, Illinois , designed by Frank D. Chase and Childs & Smith, built.
Owens-Illinois Glass Company building in Toledo, Ohio , built.
George Rogers Clark Memorial in Vincennes, Indiana by Frederic Charles Hirons dedicated.
Lasipalatsi "temporary" office and commercial building in Helsinki , Finland , designed by Viljo Revell , Heimo Riihimäki and Niilo Kokko, built.
Peter Jones (department store) in London , designed by William Crabtree of Slater, Crabtree and Moberly, completed.
Casa Bloc (workers' apartments), Barcelona , designed by Josep Lluís Sert , completed.
Casa del Fascio (Como) , designed by Giuseppe Terragni , completed.
Vytautas the Great War Museum in Kaunas , Lithuania completed.
Olympic Stadium (Berlin) , designed by Werner March , opened.
Mounts Baths , Northampton , England, designed by James Caldwell Prestwich , built.
Tilkka military hospital, Helsinki , Finland, designed by Olavi Sortta, completed.[ 3] [ 4]
Florin Court (apartments), London, designed by Guy Morgan and Partners .
Pullman Court (apartments), London, designed by Frederick Gibberd in 1933, completed.
'Beehive ' terminal at Gatwick Airport , England , designed by Frank Hoar of Hoar, Marlow & Lovett, opened.[ 5] [ 6] [ 7]
Airship hangar at Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport , Rio de Janeiro , Brazil opened.
Zwickau Hauptbahnhof (railway station), Germany, designed by Otto Falk, opened.
Campion Hall, Oxford (college), England, designed by Edwin Lutyens , opened.[ 8] [ 9]
Church of St Monica, Bootle , England, designed by F. X. Velarde .
Kenwood House, Nairobi , Kenya, designed by Ernst May .
The Laughing Water roadhouse , Cobham, Kent , England, designed by Clough Williams-Ellis , built.
The Maybury roadhouse, Edinburgh, designed by Paterson & Broom, opened.
Obelisk of Buenos Aires designed by Alberto Prebisch .
Canadian National Vimy Memorial , designed by Walter Seymour Allward , dedicated.
5 Frug Street, White City (Tel Aviv) , Mandatory Palestine , designed by Yehuda Liolka.
British General Post Office K6 'Jubilee' red telephone box , designed by Giles Gilbert Scott , introduced.[ 10]
Cairo Flats (apartments), Melbourne , by Australian modernist architect Best Overend , completed.
Awards
Births
Deaths
References
^ Wuellner, Margarita J.; Fratinardo, Marlise; Kainer, Amanda (2009). "Final Inventory Report: Survey of Original Fine and Decorative Arts on the Royal Mail Ship Queen Mary" (PDF) . Santa Monica: PCR Services Corporation. Retrieved 2015-04-14 .
^ Allaback, Sarah (2008). The First American Women Architects . Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780252033216 . OCLC 167518574 . Retrieved 2018-07-10 – via Google Books .
^ "Puolustusvoimien 1930-luvun arkkitehtuuri Helsingissä" (in Finnish). National Board of Antiquities. 2009-12-22. Retrieved 2014-03-14 .
^ "Tilkassa tapahtuu" (in Finnish). Yle Elävä Arkisto. 2006-10-25. Retrieved 2014-03-14 .
^ "Gatwick's send-off" . Flight . 11 June 1936. pp. 616–19. Retrieved 12 July 2011 .
^ "Modern Airport – Features of Gatwick, London's Latest Terminal: Rational Building Layout: Ground and Air Traffic Control: Ancillary Services" . Flight . 4 June 1936. pp. 602–4. Retrieved 12 July 2011 .
^ King, John. "Gatwick's Beehive: a forgotten development". The Thirties Society Journal . 2 : 25–8.
^ Brown, Jane (1996). Lutyens and the Edwardians: An English Architect and his Clients . London: Viking. pp. 223–227. ISBN 0-670-85871-4 .
^ Historic England . "Campion Hall (including chapel) Micklen Hall (including chapel) (1046738)" . National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 14 March 2012 .
^ Johannessen, Neil (1994). Telephone Boxes . Princes Risborough: Shire Publications. ISBN 0-7478-0250-5 .
^ Dennis Hevesi (2010-03-08). "Frank Williams, Architect of Skyscrapers, Dies at 73" . The New York Times .