Peep Jänes Explained

Peep Jänes (born 26 December 1936 in Rakvere, Estonia) is an Estonian architect.

He graduated from Tallinn Secondary School No. 2 (Tallinna Reaalkool) in 1955 and studied in the TPI from 1955 to 1958 and from 1958 to 1963 in the ERKI, where he graduated as an architect. Peep Jänes is one of Estonia's most important Soviet-era architects who developed daring formal solutions during difficult times. His five decades of work are characterized by well-publicized buildings and objects of significance. Peep Jänes has designed over 300 buildings, projects and competitions.

He acted mainly during the Soviet period – 1970s and 1980s. His architectural style is predominantly modernist. He worked in Tallinn in 1963–68 and 1975–1993 in the "Estonian Project". 1968–1975 "Land Design Project" and 1994 "Kolde Project".

Since 1964, he has been a member of the Architectural Union.

Career

Jänes is the architect of the Pirita Olympic Sports Center (1975–1980, with Henno Sepmann, Ants Raid and Himm Looveer, 1980;[1] USSR Prize 1981 and the International Architects' Union (UIA) Biennial Interarch 83)

According to his design, the Mustamäe Municipality Center was built in Tallinn (1963–1970, also known as the "Kännu Kukk" restaurant).

Among other things, he was one of the architects of the reconstruction of the Estonian Theater.

In addition, there are several private houses and garden houses.

Credits

References

  1. Web site: 2022-06-16 . Traces of the 1980 Moscow Olympics in Tallinn . 2023-02-02 . Deep Baltic . en-US.
  2. Web site: Tambur . Silver . 2021-10-12 . Pictures: The ten most important Estonian buildings of the 20th century, as chosen by the architects . 2023-02-02 . Estonian World . en-GB.

External links