1721 in architecture
| |||
---|---|---|---|
Buildings and structures
|
The year 1721 in architecture involved some significant events.
Buildings and structures
Buildings
- Bocking Windmill, Essex, England.[1]
- 7 Burlington Gardens, later Queensberry House, London, Giacomo Leoni's first design for England
- Fort King George, along the Altamaha River in the modern-day US state of Georgia[2]
- Ruthven Barracks in Scotland completed
- Jackson Square (New Orleans), New France
- Nazarbaug Palace, Gujarat, India
- Ellingen Residence in Ellingen, Bavaria completed in its Baroque form
- Písek Gate, Prague, Czech Republic
- Saint Paul the First Hermit Cathedral completed as parish church of San Pablo, Laguna, Philippines
Awards
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Philippe Buache.
Births
- March 5 – John Adam, architect, brother of Robert Adam and James Adam (died 1792)
- Bourse de Commerce) and author (died 1793)
- date unknown
- Francesco Sabatini, Sicilian architect working in Spain (died 1797)[3]
- Thomas Sandby, English draughtsman, watercolour artist, architect, and teacher (died 1798)
Deaths
- 1656)[4]
- 1633)
References
- ^ "Windmill, Church Street (south east side), Braintree, Essex". English Heritage. Retrieved 2008-05-25.
- ^ Coleman, Kenneth (1991). A History of Georgia. University of Georgia.
- ISBN 978-1-78310-390-4.
- ^ Mallory, Nina A.; Varriano, John L. (1974). Carlo Francesco Bizzaccheri (1655-1721). Society of Architectural Historians.