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1847 in architecture
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The year 1847 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
- May – The Architectural Association School of Architecture is founded in London.
Buildings and structures
Buildings opened
- March 31 – The first mass is celebrated in St. Patrick's Basilica, Montreal, designed by Pierre-Louis Morin and Father Félix Martin.
- April 15 – Lords Chamber in the Palace of Westminster in London, rebuilt to the design of Charles Barry with decoration by Augustus Pugin.
- June 28 – Trains first use Broadstone railway station in Dublin, Ireland, designed by John Skipton Mulvany.
- June 30 – Water first flows along the Roquefavour Aqueduct in the south of France, engineered by Jean François Mayor de Montricher.
- August 3 – Trains first use Huddersfield railway station in the north of England, designed by James Pigott Pritchett.
- September 10 – Trains first use Carlisle Citadel railway station in the north of England, designed by William Tite.
- November – Trains first use Bury St Edmunds railway station in the east of England, probably designed by Sancton Wood.
- First performance at the Carltheater in Vienna, designed by Eduard van der Nüll and August Sicard von Sicardsburg.
Buildings completed
- Madina Mosque, Murshidabad, West Bengal, India, rebuilt under the supervision of Sadeq Ali Khan.
- St Marie's Church (Roman Catholic), Rugby, England, designed by Augustus Pugin.
- Rectory, Rampisham, Dorset, England, designed by Augustus Pugin.
Awards
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture – Louis-Jules André.
Births
- March 21 – Fredrik Olaus Lindström, Swedish city architect (died 1919)
- April 16 – Hans Auer, Austrian architect (died 1906)
- June 9 – Alajos Hauszmann, Austro-Hungarian architect and professor (died 1926)
- August 24 – Charles Follen McKim, American architect (died 1909)

Deaths
- March 23 – Archibald Simpson, Scottish architect practicing in Aberdeen (born 1790)
- October 13 – Lewis Nockalls Cottingham, English architect, pioneer in the study of Medieval Gothic architecture (born 1787)
- November 26 – Harvey Lonsdale Elmes, English architect, designer of St George's Hall, Liverpool (born 1814; consumption)
References
References
- John Summerson: ''The Architectural Association 1847–1947'', Pleiades Books, London 1947.
- "Saint-Patrick's Basilica". Images Montréal.
- Designated a [[National Historic Sites of Canada. National Historic Site of Canada]]. {{CRHP. 12104. St. Patrick's Basilica National Historic Site of Canada. August 17, 2011
- Biddle, Gordon. (2003). "Britain's Historic Railway Buildings: an Oxford Gazetteer of Structures and Sites". Oxford University Press.
- "Heritage Murshidabad » Imambara". Government of West Bengal.
- "F. O. Lindström". Västerbottens museum.
- (2002). "Hauszmann Alajos". Holnap Kiadó.
- Eastlake, Charles Locke. (1872). "A History of the Gothic Revival". Longmans, Green & Co.
- Watkin, David. (2004). "Elmes, Harvey Lonsdale (1814–1847)".
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