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| | madden.htm |
 | | 1902 is the last in the series, as this is the year of John Madden's death. |  | | Jeremy Williams, in A Companion Guide to Architecture in Ireland, 1837-1921 (Dublin, 1994), describes Hilton as: |  | | His will is a most cruel one by his nephew and successor in the title, as he only gets a small entailed property of £1,400 or £1,500 a year. |
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http://www.proni.gov.uk/records/private/madden.htm
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| | Inman Park--Atlanta: A National Register of Historic Places Travel Itinerary |
 | | Some notable buildings include the Jacobean Revival home designed by Atlanta architect W. Downing, called the Ernest Woodruff House, built in 1902. |  | | Found in this historic district are examples of Queen Anne architecture, Colonial Revival, and Shingle Style homes and bungalows. |  | | At the intersection of Euclid and Elizabeth streets are the Joel Hurt House and the Asa G. Candler House. |
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http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/atlanta/inm.htm
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| | 1902 in architecture - encyclopedia article about 1902 in architecture. |
 | | See also: 1901 in architecture See also: 1900 in architecture, other events of 1901, 1902 in architecture and the architecture timeline. |  | | , 1903 in architecture See also: 1902 in architecture, other events of 1903, 1904 in architecture and the architecture timeline. |  | | Among his architectural achievements are St Catherine's College, Oxford, work at Merton College, Oxford, the Radisson SAS Royal Hotel, Copenhagen, the Danish National Bank building in Copenhagen, as well as a number of town halls and other buildings in his native Denmark. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/1902%20in%20architecture
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| | architecture - encyclopedia article about architecture. |
 | | According to Nikolaus Pevsner Sir Nikolaus Pevsner (January 30, 1902 – August 18, 1983) was a German-born British historian of art and, especially, architecture. |  | | Architecture is a multi-disciplinary field, including within its fold mathematics Mathematics is the study of quantity, structure, space, and change. |  | | Architecture first evolved out of the dynamics between needs (shelter, security, worship, etc.) and means (available building materials and attendant skills). |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/architecture
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| | History of Architecture at Illinois |
 | | Ricker's successsor as head of the Department of Architecture was Frederick M. Mann, a graduate of the University of Minnesota in civil engineering and of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in architecture, who had served as Professor of Architecture at Washington University in St. Louis from 1902 to 1910. |  | | Architecture was included in the Polytechnic Department of the proposed administrative structure Gregory presented to the trustees in May of 1867. |  | | Among the architecture faculty are NCSA (National Center for Super-computing Applications) Fellows, participants in the Critical Research Initiative and recipients of Madden Initiative Grants for exploration of the intersections of the Arts and Technology. |
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http://www.arch.uiuc.edu/about/history
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| | Modernism |
 | | Modern landscape architecture in the United States was impacted by Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx (1909-94), and Mexican architect Luis Barragán (1902-88). |  | | In the 1960s and 1970s some examples of modern architecture and landscape architecture had lost their appeal as the forms were being recycled in uninteresting ways. |  | | In architecture the Japanese inspired bungalow designs and small gardens of Charles and Henry Green are examples of the California style blended with the Arts and Crafts style (e.g., the Blacker and Gamble [1908-9] houses in Pasadena, California). |
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http://architecture.arizona.edu/landscape/courses/lar542/modernism.htm
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| | Modernism |
 | | Modern landscape architecture in the United States was impacted by Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx (1909-94), and Mexican architect Luis Barragán (1902-88). |  | | In the 1960s and 1970s some examples of modern architecture and landscape architecture had lost their appeal as the forms were being recycled in uninteresting ways. |  | | In architecture the Japanese inspired bungalow designs and small gardens of Charles and Henry Green are examples of the California style blended with the Arts and Crafts style (e.g., the Blacker and Gamble [1908-9] houses in Pasadena, California). |
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http://architecture.arizona.edu/landscape/courses/lar542/modernism.htm
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| | Edward Durrell Stone Biography / Biography of Edward Durrell Stone Biography Biography |
 | | The American architect, educator, and designer Edward Durrell Stone (1902-1978) was an early practitioner of the International Style, but took his architecture in a new direction after 1940. |  | | He was particularly known for his design for the U.S. embassy in New Delhi, India, and for the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. Edward Durrell Stone was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas, on March 9, 1902. |  | | Eclecticism was on the way out in architecture, and Stone switched to MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) where Jacques Carlu was beginning to experiment with modern design. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/biography-edward-durrell-stone/index.html
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| | 1902 in architecture Definition / 1902 in architecture Research |
 | | 1902 in architecture Definition / 1902 in architecture Research |  | | [click for more] and the architecture timeline This page indexes the individual year in architecture pages. |  | | Each year is annotated with a significant event as a reference point. |
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http://www.elresearch.com/1902_in_architecture
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| | 1901 |
 | | 1901 in music See also: 1900 in music, other events of 1901, 1902 in music and the list of 'years in music'. |  | | 1901 in architecture See also: 1900 in architecture, other events of 1901, 1902 in architecture and the architecture tim... |  | | HMS Kent (1901) HMS Kent was a Monmouth-class armoured cruiser of 9,800 tons displacement, of the 1913. |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/1901.html
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| | Guide to the Charles Downing Lay Papers,1898-1956 |
 | | Charles Downing Lay attended the School of Architecture at Columbia University from 1896 to 1900 and received a S.B. in Landscape Architecture from Harvard University's School of Landscape Architecture in 1902. |  | | From 1902 to 1948 he maintained a landscape architecture practice in New York City. |  | | He also was consulting architect to the 1939 New York World's Fair and worked on conservation efforts in the Housatonic River valley, founding the Housatonic Valley Planning Association in 1948. |
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http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/htmldocs/RMM04477.html
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| | Modernism |
 | | Modern landscape architecture in the United States was impacted by Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx (1909-94), and Mexican architect Luis Barragán (1902-88). |  | | In the 1960s and 1970s some examples of modern architecture and landscape architecture had lost their appeal as the forms were being recycled in uninteresting ways. |  | | From 1940 he designed a number of gardens experimenting with the juxtaposition of stone retaining walls and horizontal planes, with water in pools channels, and artificial waterfalls. |
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http://architecture.arizona.edu/landscape/courses/lar542/modernism.htm
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| | elizabeth birmingham |
 | | Rubbo's strengths are in her ability to work outside typical architectural studies methodologies and to speculate that the historical attribution of the architecture to Griffin and the decorative work to Mahony Griffin might not be based in fact but in habit. |  | | Although much of what was written undermined her position to architecture and the architectural canon of great men and monuments, a history exists which later scholars can compare against existing primary documents. |  | | The central function of the discipline of architecture is to provide the intellectual instruments by which 'architecture' is valorized. |
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http://www.ndsu.nodak.edu/ndsu/birmingh/research/samplech2.html
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| | Leeds Met - Architecture, Landscape & Design - Welcome |
 | | The School originated as a part of the Government School of Design in the 1850s with the Leeds School of Architecture formed in 1902. |  | | The Leeds School of Architecture, Landscape and Design, a part of the Faculty of Arts and Society has over 900 students studying full and part time with an academic and support staff of nearly 50. |  | | A vibrant staff research and practice culture focused on interdisciplinary design, community and environmental art and sustainable architecture underpins academic study. |
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http://www.leedsmet.ac.uk/as/ald
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| | Stanford University Libraries: Art & Architecture Collections |
 | | A dictionary of architecture and building (1902) 3 v. |  | | Another old standard encyclopedia of architecture, covering major architects, styles, periods, countries, terms, and subjects relating to the social and legal aspects of architecture and building. |  | | Contains long, signed articles, accompanied by line illustrations and bibliographies, on the art and architecture, iconography, symbols, epigraphy, paleography, numismatics, liturgy, rites, and ceremonies of the early church to the time of Charlemagne. |
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http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/hasrg/art/237aency.html
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| | Amazon.co.uk: Life and Work of Luis Barragan: Books |
 | | Mexico's great modern master, Luis Barragna (1902-1988) exerts a profound influence on contemporary architecture. |  | | In this iluminating protrait, the personal and professional lives of this restless, deeply spiritual man unfold in engaging details, including his years in Guadalajara and Mexico City, where he moved in avant-garde artistic circles with Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo, and Jose Clemente Orozco. |  | | Subjects > Art, Architecture & Photography > Architecture > Architects > General |
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http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0847820572
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| | Online resources for London architecture and urban life |
 | | A series begun in 1951 by the architectural historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner (1902-83) with the aim of providing an up-to-date portable guide to the most significant buildings in every part of the country, suitable for both general reader and specialist. |  | | "A non-profit international professional organization whose professional goals are to foster communication among architectural perspectivists, to raise the standards of architectural illustration and to acquaint the public with the importance of such drawing as integral to the practice of architecture." |  | | Oldest independent school of architecture in the U.K. Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, London. |
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http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/year1/architecture.html
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| | ARCHITECTURE |
 | | 1902 in architecture can be seen in the Personal Collection Hildreth Section. |  | | Architecture includes a wide variety of structures and landscaping. |  | | All settlers begin with a basic roof over their heads housing, but there is much more to architecture. |
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http://www.hollis.nh.us/windowsonhollispast/architecture/main.html
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| | 1901 - encyclopedia article about 1901. |
 | | Architecture See also: 1900 in architecture, other events of 1901, 1902 in architecture and the architecture timeline. |  | | Union Station in Washington, DC, designed by Daniel Burnham and Peirce Anderson is commissioned. |  | | January 1 - The centenary of the Act of Union is celebrated by British forces in Ireland. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/1901
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| | ArchitectureWeek New Books Listing |
 | | New York Times architecture critic Herbert Muschamp calls Rafael Viñoly "the most elegant architect now practicing in the United States." This collection of his work from all over the world is documented in more than 500 color images and drawings. |  | | The story of New York's Pennsylvania Station, from its construction (1902-1910) to its demolition in the 1960s, and the anticipation of a new station in 2003. |  | | This book addresses the emergence of a new kind of architecture, in which building performance is a guiding design principle, adopting new performance-based priorities for the design of cities, buildings, landscape and infrastructures. |
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http://www.architectureweek.com/new_books.html
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| | Luis Barragán - The Quiet Revolution :: arcspace.com |
 | | Luis Barragán (1902-1988) is regarded as the most prominent Mexican architect and as one of the major figures on the international stage of architecture in the 20th Century. |  | | Five digital projections, in black boxes with simple Barragán like benches, illustrate various aspects of Luis Barragán’s work: light and colour, the pursuit of a quality of living that is simultaneously traditional and modern, the relationship between architecture and landscape, and the role of architecture in the urban setting. |  | | Barragán’s faith in the power of simplicity, his unwavering pursuit of physical and aesthetic quality, his extraordinary sense of colour, and finally, his unerring eye instil a uniqueness in his works which fails every attempt to imitate them. |
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http://www.arcspace.com/exhibitions/barragan/quiet_revolution_ex
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| | MEXICO CONNECT - ARCHITECTURE OF MEXICO - The Houses of Luis Barragán |
 | | Luis Barragán was born in Guadalajara in 1902 of a prosperous, aristocratic family, and grew up on a large ranch near the remote village of Mazamitla in Michoacan, a region known for its beautiful vernacular architecture. |  | | Although trained as an engineer, Barragán discovered he had a closer affinity with architecture. |  | | Architecture of the Pacific Coast -- Architecture of the Hacienda |
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http://www.mexconnect.com/mex_/feature/barragan1.html
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| | Europe-Japan Social Science Research Centre: Previous Seminars |
 | | This was a particularly appropriate focus for the University of Glasgow, as students from Japan came to the Department of Naval Architecture in its early days. |  | | This international conference was designed to mark the centenary of the Anglo-Japanese alliance signed in 1902. |  | | The Conference began with the diplomatic and military context of the alliance, but then moved on to discuss the economic, commercial and cultural aspects of the Anglo-Japanese relations in the period 1902- 22. |
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http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/europejapan/conprev.html
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| | MORGANCV.DOC (Word5) |
 | | Charles Eliot, Landscape Architect, a republication of the 1902 edition with an introduction by Keith N. Morgan. |  | | "Charles Eliot: The Man Behind the Monograph," Center for Cultural Landscape Studies, Arnold Arboretum, Harvard University, November, 1997; and the Graduate Program in Landscape Architecture, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, March, 1998. |  | | "Charles Eliot as Landscape Architecture Critic," paper presented at the conference celebrating the tenth anniversary of the fellowship program of the Center for Studies in Landscape Architecture, Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, DC, May, 1981. |
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http://www.bu.edu/ah/morgancv.html
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| | Interviews on Architecture and Landscape Architects of the San Francisco Bay Area (ROHO) |
 | | A study of Thomas Dolliver Church (1902-1978), landscape architect, through interviews with colleagues in architecture and landscape architecture, staff, clients and friends, landscape contractors and nurserymen, and with Elizabeth Roberts Church. |  | | A Woman in Landscape Architecture in California, 1926-1989, 1990, 235 pp. |  | | A Half-Century of Landscape Architecture, 1965, 182 pp. |
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http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/ROHO/collections/subjectarea/artslit/archland.html
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| | Kip's travelpage. Barcelona. Contemporary architecture. |
 | | His record of studies is quite impressive: he studied at the Institute of Architecture in Valencia, at the Federal Institute ofTechnology in Zurich, at the Politechnic University of Valencia, at the University of Seville, at the Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, Scotland, and at the Milwaukee School of Engineering, USA. |  | | In Holland he got to know the architecture of H.P. Berlage, whose influence was visible in his works of the period before WW I. Between 1919 and 1924 he made some designs which where alternating striking and authentic. |  | | Josep Lluís Sert was born in Barcelona on the 1st of July 1902. |
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http://www.geocities.com/TheTropics/Shores/8445/contemp.htm
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| | Journal of San Diego History |
 | | From her arrival at San Diego in 1883 until her friend Mary Coulston came in 1902, Kate Sessions was the main proponent of Picturesque landscape architecture in town. |  | | On August 15, 1902, at the suggestion of Julius Wangenheim, a highly intellectual and philanthropic local businessman, the San Diego Chamber of Commerce formed a Park Improvement Committee to develop a master plan for City Park and solicit funds for its implementation. |  | | Between the first comprehensive park planning of 1902 and naming the park Balboa in 1910, when preparation began for the 1915 Panama-California Exposition on the City land, the seeds of two great urban improvement movements were brought to San Diego by dedicated citizens. |
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http://www.sandiegohistory.org/journal/79winter/citypark.htm
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| | Luis Barragan - Great Buildings Online |
 | | His future design ideas were shaped by the Moorish architecture of Southern Spain, the domestic architecture of the Mediterranean, the gardens of Ferdinand Bac, the theories of Frederick Kiesler, and the writings and theories of Le Corbusier. |  | | Louis Barragán was born in Guadalajara, Mexico in 1902. |  | | Additionally inspired by native artwork, Barragan sought to create an architecture that retained its vernacular roots while it strove for spiritual beauty and harmony with nature. |
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http://www.greatbuildings.com/architects/Luis_Barragan.html
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| | 1898 in architecture - encyclopedia article about 1898 in architecture. |
 | | See also: 1897 in architecture See also: 1896 in architecture, other events of 1897, 1898 in architecture and the architecture timeline. |  | | Inspired by the Utopian novel "Looking Backward", Howard published "To-morrow: a Peaceful Path to Real Reform" in 1898 (reissued in 1902 as "Garden Cities of To-morrow"), organized the Garden City Association in 1899, and founded two cities in England: Letchworth in 1903, and Welwyn Garden City in 1920. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/1898%20in%20architecture
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| | Online resources for London architecture and urban life |
 | | A series begun in 1951 by the architectural historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner (1902-83) with the aim of providing an up-to-date portable guide to the most significant buildings in every part of the country, suitable for both general reader and specialist. |  | | See the discussions on the environment that architecture shapes and, in general, the intentions motivating architectural design. |  | | Oldest independent school of architecture in the U.K. Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL, London. |
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http://www.kcl.ac.uk/humanities/cch/year1/architecture.html
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