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Overview of the events of 1901 in architecture
The year 1901 in architecture involved some significant events.
Buildings and structures
Buildings
Philadelphia City Hall
The Erlöserkirche, Munich , Germany
Federal Court House and Post office for the Upper Midwest, the modern-day "Landmark Center" , St. Paul, Minnesota , designed by Willoughby J. Edbrooke , is completed.
Philadelphia City Hall in Philadelphia , Pennsylvania , designed by John McArthur, Jr. , is completed, the world's tallest occupied masonry building.
Stolp Town Hall , in modern-day Słupsk , Poland , designed by Karl Zaar with Rudolf Vahl, is opened.
Germantown Junction station, North Philadelphia , designed by Theophilus P. Chandler Jr. , is completed.
Moscow Vindavsky railway station , designed by Stanislav Brzhozovsky, is opened.
Union Station (Washington, D.C.) , designed by Daniel Burnham and W. Pierce Anderson, is commissioned.
Union Trust Company Building in Providence, Rhode Island , designed by Stone, Carpenter & Willson , is completed.
Postal Savings Bank building (Postatakarékpénztár ), Budapest , designed by Ödön Lechner , is completed.
Wardenclyffe Tower in Shoreham, New York , designed by Nikola Tesla and Stanford White is begun.
Willits House in Highland Park, Illinois , designed by Frank Lloyd Wright .
Deanery Garden in Sonning , England, designed by Edwin Lutyens with garden by Gertrude Jekyll , is completed.
Langer House in Vienna, designed by Jože Plečnik , is completed.
Whitechapel Art Gallery in east London , designed by Charles Harrison Townsend , is opened.
Horniman Museum in south London, designed by C. Harrison Townsend, is completed.
Génin-Louis Grain Shop in Nancy , designed by Henry Gutton and his nephew Henri Gutton , is built.
Vaxelaire Department Store in Nancy , designed by Émile André and Eugène Vallin , is completed.
Jakarta Cathedral in the Dutch East Indies , completed by M. J. Hulswit following a design of 1891 by Pastor Antonius Dijkmans, is consecrated.
Erlöserkirche, Munich , designed by Theodor Fischer , is consecrated.
Zuoz Bridge, Switzerland, designed by Robert Maillart , is built.[1]
The Glasgow International Exhibition (1901) is held with new architecture by James Millar and Charles Rennie Mackintosh and transplanted mock Tudor cottages from Port Sunlight .[2]
Awards
Publications
Births
Deaths
References
^ Brown, David J. (1993). Bridges . London: Mitchell Beazley. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-85732-163-0 .
^ Pelle, Kimberley D. "Glasgow 1901". In Findling, John E. (ed.). Encyclopedia of World's Fairs and Expositions . McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 164–5. ISBN 978-0-7864-3416-9 .