1802 in architecture explained
The year 1802 in architecture involved some significant events.
Buildings and structures
Buildings
- New Satu Mare Chain Church in Romania, designed by Preinlich Sigismund, is completed.
- New St. George's Church, Dublin, Ireland, designed by Francis Johnston, is completed.
- The Temple of Saint Philip Neri in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico is completed.
- The Four Courts in Dublin, designed by James Gandon, is completed.
- Rebuilding of Liverpool Town Hall in England under the direction of John Foster is completed.
- The Classen Library in Copenhagen, Denmark, designed by the benefactor Peter Hersleb Classen, presumably assisted by Andreas Kirkerup,[1] is completed.
- Wildersgade Barracks in Copenhagen, designed by the architects and developers Jørgen Henrich Rawert and Andreas Hallander, is opened.
- Mežotne Palace in Latvia, designed by Johann Georg Adam Berlitz, is completed.
- Badenich Palace in Bejsce, Poland, designed by Jakub Kubicki, is built.
- Sedgeley, a mansion on the Schuylkill River near Philadelphia designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, is completed.
- Wrangel Palace in Stockholm, Sweden is rebuilt after a fire by Carl Christoffer Gjörwell.
- New dining room and conservatory for the Royal Pavilion, Brighton, England, designed by Peter Frederick Robinson, are completed.
- Monument to the Magdeburg Rights (Kiev) in Ukraine, designed by Andrey Melensky, is erected.
Awards
Births
Deaths
- July 17 –, French architect (born 1710)
- John Whitehead, English amateur architect working in Portugal (born 1726)
Notes and References
- Web site: Amaliegade 38. indenforvoldene.dk. 2012-11-25. https://web.archive.org/web/20150216150150/http://indenforvoldene.dk/amaliegade%2038.html. 2015-02-16. dead.