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1812 in architecture

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The year 1812 in architecture involved some significant events.

Buildings and structures

Buildings

  • July 6 – The Laigh Milton Viaduct, built to carry the Kilmarnock and Troon Railway in Scotland, is officially opened.
  • October 10 – The Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, in London, designed by Benjamin Dean Wyatt, the fourth theatre on the site, hosts its first production.
  • Original Scottish Law Courts, Edinburgh, designed by Robert Reid, completed.
  • Custom House, Leith, Edinburgh, designed by Robert Reid, completed.
  • HM Prison Perth, Scotland, designed by Robert Reid, completed.
  • The original Breidenbacher Hof hotel in Düsseldorf, Germany, opens to the public. (It is destroyed by bombing in 1943 and later rebuilt at a different location.)
  • The Egyptian Hall in Piccadilly, London, designed by P. F. Robinson, is completed (demolished in 1905).
  • St. John's Cathedral (Belize City) is completed, the first church to be built in the colony of British Honduras.
  • The Flag Tower of Hanoi is completed.
  • Temple of Diana, Valtice, Moravia, designed by Joseph Hardtmuth, is built.
  • The Mahmoudiya Mosque in Jaffa, modern-day Israel, is completed.
  • Castle Cottage, Newport-on-Tay, Scotland, is built.

Awards

  • Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Tilman-François Suys.

Publications

  • William Adam's Vitruvius Scoticus is published posthumously by his grandson William Adam of Blair Adam in Edinburgh.

Births

  • January 10 – Georg Hermann Nicolai, German architect and academic (died 1881)
  • March 1 – Augustus Pugin, English Gothic Revival architect, designer, artist and critic (died 1852)
  • March 2 – Samuel Sanders Teulon, English Gothic Revival architect (died 1873)
  • July 21 – Robert William Billings, British Gothic Revival architectural draughtsman and architect (died 1874)
  • September 8 – Matthew Ellison Hadfield, English Gothic Revival architect (died 1885)
  • September 13 – John McMurtry, American builder and architect (died 1890)
  • October 21 – Richard Cromwell Carpenter, English Gothic Revival architect (died 1855)
  • November 9 – Paul Abadie, French architect and building restorer (died 1884)

Deaths

  • January 9 bapt. – Eduard van der Nüll, Viennese architect (suicide 1868)
  • November 7 – Matvey Kazakov, Russian neoclassical architect (born 1738)
  • date unknown – Cosimo Morelli, Italian neoclassical architect (born 1732)

References

References

  1. Lewin, Henry Grote (1925). ''Early British Railways. A short history of their origin & development: 1801–1844''. London: The Locomotive Publishing Co Ltd.
  2. Awdry, Christopher, (1990). ''Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies''. London: Guild Publishing.
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