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Overview of the events of 1960 in architecture
The year 1960 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
Buildings and structures
Buildings opened
- .
- March 16 – Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City, Philippines
- April 12 – Candlestick Park on the shore of San Francisco Bay, designed by architect John Savage Bolles.
- May 25 – Teatro General San Martín in Buenos Aires, the first major project by Argentine architect Mario Roberto Álvarez.
- June 3 – Pier Theatre, Bournemouth, England, designed by Elisabeth Scott.
- July 26 – Großes Festspielhaus for Salzburg Festival in Austria, designed by Clemens Holzmeister.
- August – Ongryu Bridge on the Taedong River in Pyongyang, North Korea.[1]
- November 21 – Hamilton City Hall in Hamilton, Ontario, designed by Stanley Roscoe.
American Embassy London Chancery Building, designed by
Eero Saarinen .
R. Buckminster Fuller
.
Buildings completed
- Euromast in Rotterdam, Netherlands, from the design by Hugh Maaskant.
- Tallinn Song Festival Grounds, Estonia, designed by Alar Kotli.[2]
- Broxbourne and Harlow Town railway stations on the Eastern Region of British Railways.
St. Petersburg, Russia
.
- Mabel McDowell Elementary School in Columbus, Indiana, designed by architect John Carl Warnecke.
- Rutherford School, Paddington, London, designed by architects Leonard Manasseh and Ian Baker.
- Trenchard Hall, University of Ibadan, Nigeria, designed by Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew.[2]
- Mirante do Vale in the Central Zone of São Paulo, the tallest building in Brazil, designed by engineer Waldomiro Zarzur.
- Napoli Centrale railway station and PalaLottomatica sports arena, by Italian engineer Pier Luigi Nervi, and others.
- and Arturo Danusso.
- .
- Our Lady of Fatima Church in Harlow, England, designed by Gerard Goalen.
- St Andrew & St George Church in Stevenage, England, designed by Seely & Paget.[3]
- Capuchinas Chapel, Tlalpan, Mexico City, designed by Luis Barragán.[2]
- Cristo Obrero y Nuestra Señora de Lourdes, Estación Atlántida, Uruguay, designed by Eladio Dieste.
- St Paul's, Bow Common, London, designed by Robert Maguire and Keith Murray.
- Holy Trinity Church, Dockhead, London, designed by Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel.
SAS Royal Hotel, Copenhagen, with building and furnishings designed by
Arne Jacobsen .
- .
- The Chemosphere, a house in the Hollywood Hills, California, designed by American architect John Lautner.[2]
Baltimore, Maryland
.
- William L. Slayton House in the Cleveland Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C., designed by I. M. Pei.
- Cedarwood , a house in Woolton, Liverpool, England, designed by Dewi-Prys Thomas and Gerald Beech.[4]
- Pipidowek, a house in Ivy Lane, Maybury, Woking, England, designed by Edward Hartry for himself (approximate date).[5]
Awards
Births
Deaths
Basil Bramston Hooper, New Zealand architect (born
1876 )
- February 8 – Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, English architect best known for Liverpool Cathedral and Battersea Power Station (born 1880)
- February 20 – Barry Dierks, American-born Modernist architect working chiefly on the French Riviera (born 1899)
- March 26 – W. Curtis Green, English architect (born 1875)
- March 27 – Holger Jacobsen, Danish architect best known for Stærekassen (born 1876)
- May 1 – Charles Holden, English architect best known for London Underground stations (born 1875)
- May 19 – Marcello Piacentini, Italian architect and urban theorist (born 1881)
- August 22 – Tage William-Olsson, Swedish architect and town planning architect of Gothenburg (born 1888)
- December 2 – Fritz August Breuhaus, German architect, interior designer and designer (born 1883)
- December 14
- December 18 – Zeev Rechter, Israeli architect (born 1899)
- December 22 – Sir Ninian Comper, British Gothic Revival architect (born 1864)
- December 28 – F. X. Velarde, English Catholic church architect (born 1897)
- date unknown – Giuseppe Psaila, Maltese Art Nouveau architect (born 1891)
References