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2004 in architecture

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The year 2004 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.

Events

  • January 28 – Transformation AGO: The Art Gallery of Ontario announces that Frank Gehry has designed a renovation and expansion of the gallery. Supposedly in the shape of an ice skate, the change is met with opposition by frequent benefactor Kenneth Thomson.
  • March 24 – Demolition of the Brutalist Tricorn Centre in Portsmouth, England (1966) begins.
  • June – Plans for The Cloud, a "Fourth Grace" at Liverpool Pier Head in England by Will Alsop, are abandoned.

Buildings and structures

Buildings

  • March 16 – Ray and Maria Stata Center at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, designed by Frank Gehry, is opened.
  • April 8 – ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum (art museum) in Aarhus, Denmark, designed by Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects, is opened.
  • April 28 – 30 St Mary Axe in the City of London (the Swiss Re building), designed by Norman Foster, is completed.
  • May 1 – Europa Tower in Vilnius, Lithuania, the tallest building in the Baltic States (2004–present), is opened.
  • May 8 – Forum Building, by Herzog & de Meuron, inaugurated in Barcelona during the opening ceremony of the 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures.
  • May 23 – Seattle Central Library, designed by Rem Koolhaas and Joshua Prince-Ramus, is opened to the public.
  • July 16 – BP Pedestrian Bridge in Millennium Park in the Chicago Loop, designed by Frank Gehry, is opened.
  • September – Sharp Centre for Design, Ontario College of Art & Design, Toronto, designed by Will Alsop of Alsop Architects, is completed.
  • October – Jazz at Lincoln Center performance venue in New York City, designed by Rafael Viñoly, is opened.
  • October 9 – Scottish Parliament Building in Edinburgh, by Enric Miralles, opened.
  • October 14 – Lewis Glucksman Gallery at University College Cork, Ireland, designed by O'Donnell & Tuomey, is opened.
  • November 18 – Clinton Presidential Center, Little Rock, Arkansas, by James Polshek, is opened.
  • November 20 – Expansion and renovation of New York's Museum of Modern Art designed by Yoshio Taniguchi.
  • November 28 – Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff, Wales, designed by Jonathan Adams of Percy Thomas Partnership, is opened.
  • December 14 – Millau Viaduct, by Norman Foster, at Millau, France is opened.
  • December 17 – The Sage Gateshead, a concert hall designed by Foster and Partners, opens in North East England.
  • December 31 – Taipei 101 is opened in Taiwan, and remains one of the tallest buildings in the world.
  • Netherlands Embassy in Berlin opened, designed by Rem Koolhaas.
  • IT University of Copenhagen opens its new building in Ørestad, Denmark, designed by Henning Larsen.
  • The Chongqing World Trade Center in Chongqing, China is topped out in a ceremony.
  • 30 Hudson Street, New Jersey, USA (the Goldman Sachs Tower), Jersey City's tallest building at 238 metres, is completed.
  • Reconstruction of Nový Dvůr Monastery, Czech Republic, by John Pawson is completed.
  • Reconstruction of Kingswood School, Dulwich, London, by De Rijke Marsh Morgan is completed.

Awards

  • AIA Gold Medal – Samuel Mockbee (awarded posthumously)
  • Architecture Firm Award – Lake Flato Architects
  • Driehaus Prize – Demetri Porphyrios
  • Emporis Skyscraper Award – Taipei 101
  • Grand prix national de l'architecture – Patrick Berger
  • Grand Prix de l'urbanisme – Christian de Portzamparc
  • Praemium Imperiale Architecture Award – Oscar Niemeyer
  • Pritzker Prize – Zaha Hadid
  • Prix de l'Académie d'Architecture de France – Shigeru Ban
  • Prix de l'Équerre d'Argent – Antoinette Robain and Claire Guieysse, for the Centre National de la Danse de Pantin
  • RIAS Award for Architecture – Elder and Cannon Architects for St. Aloysius' College's Clavius Building, Glasgow
  • RAIA Gold Medal – Gregory Burgess
  • RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Rem Koolhaas
  • Stirling Prize – 30 St Mary Axe, London by Foster and Partners
  • Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture – Peter Walker
  • Vincent Scully Prize – Aga Khan
  • Twenty-five Year Award – East Building, National Gallery of Art

Deaths

  • May 27 – Sigrid Lorenzen Rupp, German American architect (born 1943)
  • August 30 - E. Fay Jones, American architect (born 1921)
  • September 12 – Max Abramovitz, American architect (born 1908)
  • September 22 — Edward Larrabee Barnes, American architect (born 1915)

References

References

  1. Ward, David. (2004-07-20). "Liverpool scraps plans for Cloud: Spiralling cost and design change end ambitious waterfront project". [[The Guardian]].
  2. "Driehaus Prize for Classical Architecture – Recipients". Notre Dame School of Architecture.
  3. . (16 October 2004). ["Building prize for 'icon Gherkin'"](http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3750102.stm). *BBC News*.
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