Wäinö Palmqvist | |
Birth Date: | 16 January 1882 |
Birth Place: | Kalajoki, Grand Duchy of Finland |
Death Place: | Helsinki, Finland |
Wäinö Gustaf Palmqvist (16 January 1882 — 14 July 1964),[1] commonly known as W. G. Palmqvist, was a Finnish architect best known as a designer of industrial and commercial buildings, especially the timber and paper mills and their wider factory milieus of the 1920s and 1930s, as well as several notable buildings in central Helsinki.[2]
Wäinö Palmqvist was born to civil servant Gustaf August Palmqvist and Selma Katharina Ingman.
He completed his secondary education in 1900, and went on to study architecture at the Helsinki Polytechnical Institute (later Helsinki University of Technology, now part of Aalto University), graduating in 1905.[3] Afterwards, he undertook several research trips around Europe, between 1907 and 1929.
Palmqvist was married twice: in 1910 he married Elsa Ruuth, with whom he had three children; the couple divorced later. In 1925, he married Vivi Candelin, and they had two children together.[4] His son from the second marriage,, also became an architect.
In the early part of his career, Palmqvist worked assisting notable architects of the time, including Gustaf Nyström,, Armas Lindgren and Lars Sonck.
He ran his own design bureau, first, from 1910 to 1919, jointly with his business partner, and from 1919 onwards alone.
Palmqvist's designs were characterised by massive, imposing features in the classical style, contrary to many of his contemporaries' plain and minimalist works.
He was also active in many professional and public bodies, including as a board member of the Finnish Association of Architects (1918-1937; chairing it 1934–35), secretary of the (1922-1937), and member of various city planning and cultural panels of the City of Helsinki (throughout the 1920-30s).
Palmqvist was a prolific designer with a career spanning four decades. Some of his more notable creations include: