1868 in architecture
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
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The year 1868 in architecture involved some significant events.
Events
- April 4 - Eduard van der Nüll hangs himself in disappointment at the public reaction to the design of the Vienna State Opera; August Sicard von Sicardsburg, his fellow architect on the project, dies a few months later of tuberculosis before the theatre is opened.
- July 15 - Foundation stone laid for St Colman's Cathedral, Cobh, Ireland, designed by E. W. Pugin and George Ashlin.
- Alfred Waterhouse wins the competition for the design of Manchester Town Hall in England.
- Henry Hobson Richardson is commissioned to build the Alexander Dallas Bache Monument in Washington, D.C., USA.
Buildings opened
- January 9 - Pike's Opera House, New York City, USA.
- January 20 - Neues Theater, Leipzig (opera house), Germany.
- August 15 - Teatro Giuseppe Verdi, Busseto, Italy.
- September 1 - Vienna Künstlerhaus (art gallery), Austria, designed by August Weber.
- October 1 - In London, England:
- St Pancras railway station train shed, designed by W. H. Barlow (construction of the permanent station buildings and Midland Grand Hotel, designed by George Gilbert Scott, has only just begun).[1]
- Bayswater, Gloucester Road and Notting Hill Gate Underground stations.
- October 10 - Runcorn Railway Bridge, England.
- November 30 - St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney, Australia, completed by Edmund Blacket.
Buildings completed
- Cīrava Palace, Latvia (rebuilt and expanded by Teodor Zeiler).
- The Gyeongbokgung of Korea.
- Hong Kong Hotel.
- Grand Hotel (New York City), USA.
- Gilsey's Apollo Hall (theater), New York City, USA.
- Chamberlin Iron Front Building, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, USA.
- Halle Saint-Pierre (market), Paris, France
- Royal Hampshire County Hospital, Winchester, England, designed by George Butterfield, advised by Florence Nightingale.
- Abbey Mills Pumping Stations, London, England, designed by engineer Joseph Bazalgette, Edmund Cooper, and architect Charles Driver.
- Ilkeston Town Hall, Derbyshire, England, designed by Richard Charles Sutton.
- Spanish Synagogue (Prague), designed by Vojtěch Ignátz Ullmann.
- Grønland Church, Christiania, Norway, designed by Wilhelm von Hanno.
- Sedgwick House, Cumbria, England, designed by Paley and Austin.
- Vinegar warehouse for Hill & Evans, 33–35 Eastcheap in the City of London, designed by Robert Lewis Roumieu.
Awards
- Royal Gold Medal - Austen Henry Layard.
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Alfred Leclerc.
Births
- February 24 - Alfred Brumwell Thomas, English architect (died 1948)
- April 14 - Peter Behrens, German modernist architect and designer (died 1940)
- May 13 - Arthur Anderson, Australian architect (died 1942)
- June 7 - Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish architect, designer, watercolourist and artist (died 1928)
- June 8 - Robert Robinson Taylor, first accredited African-American architect (died 1942)
Deaths
- April 4 - Eduard van der Nüll, Viennese architect (born 1812)
- May 23 - James Pigott Pritchett, architect of London and York (born 1789)
- June 11 - August Sicard von Sicardsburg, Austrian architect (born 1813)
References
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