1981 in architecture
The year 1981 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
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Buildings and structures |
Buildings and structures
Buildings
- JPMorgan Chase Tower, Houston, Texas designed by I. M. Pei is completed.
- Sydney Tower in Sydney, Australia is completed and opened.
- Colonius in Cologne, Germany is completed.
- Fifth Avenue Place (Calgary) in Calgary, Alberta
- The Riyadh TV Tower in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia is completed.
- The National Palace of Culture opens in Sofia, Bulgaria.
- Howell High School in Howell, MI is completed as the most expensive high school at the time in the State of Michigan.
- The Marriott World Trade Center originally known as the Vista Hotel, is completed in Lower Manhattan, New York as a part of the World Trade Center complex.
- The Humber Bridge in England, the longest suspension bridge in the world by the length of central span (1981–1998), designed by Freeman Fox & Partners (consulting engineers) and R. E. Slater (architect) is opened to traffic.
Awards
- AIA Gold Medal – Josep Lluís Sert.
- Architecture Firm Award – Hardy Holzman Pfeiffer Associates.
- Grand prix national de l'architecture – Gérard Thurnauer, Pierre Riboulet and Jean-Louis Veret.
- Pritzker Prize – James Stirling.
- RAIA Gold Medal – Colin Madigan.
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Philip Dowson.
- Twenty-five Year Award – Farnsworth House.
Births
Deaths
- March 7 – Roy Grounds (born 1905)
- April 10 – Charles Cowles-Voysey (born 1889)
- July 1 – Marcel Breuer (born 1902)
- September 1 – Albert Speer (born 1905)
- December 2 – Wallace Harrison (born 1895)
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