1930 in architecture
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The year 1930 in architecture involved some significant events.
Events
- May–September – International Style. The lead architects are Gunnar Asplund (who designs the Paradiset restaurant) and Sigurd Lewerentz (who also this year designs a warehouse for Philips in the city); architects involved in the housing exhibition include Sven Markelius, Paul Hedqvist, Nils Ahrbom, Helge Zimdal and Uno Åhrén.
- Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant complete the decoration of the dining room for Dorothy Wellesley at Penns-in-the-Rocks, Withyham, England.
- Architectural Review(London).
Buildings and structures
Opened
- Loew's 175th Street Theatre on Manhattan, designed by Thomas W. Lamb with interiors by the Rambusch Decorating Company.
- March 22 – Le Touret Memorial, France.
- April 8 – Brisbane City Hall, Brisbane, Australia.
- Holabird & Roche.
- Carl Moritz.
- June 21 – Hus' House (Vršovice) church and community centre in Prague, designed by Karel Truksa and Pavel Janák.
- August 18 – Salginatobel Bridge in Switzerland, designed by Robert Maillart.
Completed


- April – 40 Wall Street (at this time the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building), briefly the tallest building in the world.
- William van Alen, succeeds the Bank of Manhattan Trust Building as the tallest building in the world and the Eiffel Toweras the tallest structure. It remains the world's tallest steel-supported brick building.
- Grace Building, Sydney, Australia.[1]
- Guenete Leul Palace, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, built for Emperor Haile Selassie.
- Palazzo Gualino, Turin, Italy, designed by Giuseppe Pagano and Gino Levi-Montalcini.
- IG Farben Building, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.[2]
- Crawford's Advertising Agency, 233 High Holborn, London, designed by Frederick Etchells with Herbert A. Welch.[3]
- Thames House on Millbank, Westminster, London, designed by Frank Baines.
- Station reconstructions on Berlin U-Bahn, designed by Alfred Grenander.
- Weimar Germany, designed by Bruno Taut and Martin Wagner.
- Karl-Marx-Hof in Vienna, designed by Karl Ehn, opens, a half-mile-wide (1100 m) apartment building.
- The Graham, Anderson, Probst, and White.
- Apartments for social housing in Page Street, Westminster, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens.[4]
- Castle Drogo, a country house in Devon, England designed by Edwin Lutyens.
- Chachmei Lublin Yeshiva in Lublin, Poland.
- Villa Tugendhat in Brno, Czechoslovakia, designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
Awards
- American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal – Charles A. Platt.
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Percy Scott Worthington.
Births

- June 16 – Manfredi Nicoletti, Italian architect, pioneer of urban ecosystems (d. 2017)
- June 29 – Jan Hoogstad, Dutch architect (d. 2018)
- August 21 – Eva Vecsei, Hungarian-Canadian architect
- September 1 – Charles Correa, Indian architect, planner and activist (d. 2015)
- September 3 - Wilhelm Holzbauer, Austrian architecture (d. 2019)
- September 20 - Stanley Tigerman, American architect, theorist, and designer (d. 2019)
- October 23 – John Rauch, American architect (d. 2022)[5]
Deaths
- April 12 – Karl Lindahl, Finnish architect (born 1874)
- June 18 – Vladimir Vladimirovich Sherwood, Russian architect (born 1867)
- August 21 – Sir Aston Webb, English architect (born 1849)
- October 13 – Sydney Mitchell, Scottish architect (born 1856)
- December 1 – Peder Vilhelm Jensen-Klint, Danish architect, designer, painter and architectural theorist (born 1853)
- Robert Worley, English architect (born 1850)
References
- ^ New South Wales State Library: Grace Building Archived 2014-01-11 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 2013-04-21.
- ^ Linke, Vera (2002-03-02). "Das I.G. Farbenhaus – Ein Bau der, deutsche Geschichte widerspiegelt (The IG Farben Building – A building that reflects German History)". Transcript of lecture given in Frankfurt Archive No.K20840 (in German). Hausarbeiten.de.
- ISBN 0-14-00-3824-8.
- ^ "Page Street". Housing Prototypes. Archived from the original on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2012-12-03.
- ^ Miles, Gary (August 24, 2022). "John K. Rauch, celebrated architect and cofounder of Venturi & Rauch, has died at 91". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved February 23, 2023.