1845 in architecture
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The year 1845 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Buildings completed
- Trafalgar Square in London, designed by Charles Barry and John Nash is completed.
- Government House, Sydney in Australia, designed by Edward Blore, is completed and first occupied.
- Tolbooth Kirk, Edinburgh, designed by James Gillespie Graham and Augustus Pugin, is completed as a church and General Assembly hall (Victoria Hall) for the Church of Scotland.
- New St Mary and St Nicholas parish church in Wilton, Wiltshire, England, designed by Thomas Henry Wyatt and David Brandon, is completed at about this date.
- Praha Masarykovo nádraží, the first railway station in Prague, designed by Antonín Jüngling, is completed.
- Cambridge railway station in England is opened.
- Oundle and Wansford railway stations on Northampton and Peterborough Railway in England, designed by J. W. Livock, opened.
Awards
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Félix Thomas.
Births
- August 17 - Gyula Pártos, Hungarian architect (died 1916)[1]
- October 9 - Ferdinand Arnodin, French bridge engineer (died 1924)
Deaths
- July 10 - Christian Frederik Hansen, Danish architect ("Denmark’s Palladio")[2] (born 1756)
- July 12 - Friedrich Ludwig Persius, Prussian architect (born 1803)
- Fryderyk Bauman, Polish architect, sculptor and decorator (born 1765/70)
References
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- ↑ Pártos Gyula, Hungarian Electronic Library, retrieved 13 May 2012 (Hungarian)
- ↑ Allison Lee Palmer, Historical Dictionary of Neoclassical Art and Architecture, p 109