1784_in_architecture
1784 in architecture
Overview of the events of 1784 in architecture
The year 1784 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Quick Facts List of years in architecture (table) ...
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- September 1 – John Sanders becomes the first architectural student of John Soane.[1]
- In Saint Petersburg, Russia, at the Gardens of Orienbaum, a ride is built that features carriages that undulate over hills within grooved tracks, a predecessor of the roller coaster.
- Étienne-Louis Boullée proposes a cenotaph to Isaac Newton.
Buildings
- St Andrew's Church in New Town, Edinburgh, Scotland, designed by Andrew Frazer and Robert Kay, opened.
- In New London, Connecticut, the town hall is built (1784/85).
- Ishak Pasha Palace is built in Turkey.
- Ubosot at Wat Phra Kaew temple in Bangkok, Thailand, receives the Emerald Buddha (March 22).
- Work starts on La Moneda Palace in Santiago, originally intended to house the Spanish mint in Colonial Chile, designed by Joaquín Toesca.
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Auguste Cheval de Saint-Hubert.
- January 11 – Thomas Hamilton, Scottish architect (died 1858)
- January 21 – Georg Moller, German architect and town planner (died 1852)
- February 29 – Leo von Klenze, German Neoclassicist architect (died 1864)
- October 3 – Ithiel Town, American architect and civil engineer (died 1844)
- March – Thomas Cooley, English architect who worked in Dublin (born 1740)[2]
- April 7 – Samuel Rhoads, American architect and cultural figure (born 1711)
- September 14 – James Essex, English builder and architect (born 1722)
- Stroud, Dorothy (1984). Sir John Soane, Architect. London: Faber & Faber. p. 58. ISBN 0-571-13050-X.
- "Thomas Cooley". British Museum. Retrieved 22 September 2017.
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