Overview of the events of 1967 in architecture
The year 1967 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
Buildings opened
- February 7 – Mortonhall Crematorium, Edinburgh, Scotland, designed by Spence, Glover & Ferguson (project architect: John 'Archie' Dewar), is dedicated.
- March 1 – Queen Elizabeth Hall concert venue on the South Bank in London, England, designed by Hubert Bennett, head of the architects department of the Greater London Council, with Jack Whittle, F. G West and Geoffrey Horsefall, structural engineering by Ove Arup & Partners and construction by Higgs and Hill.[2]
- April – Habitat 67 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada designed by Moshe Safdie as part of Expo 67.[3][4]
- May 14 – Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral, England, designed by Frederick Gibberd, is consecrated.[5]
- September 3 – Essingebron, Stockholm, Sweden.
- September 4 – Ponte Morandi, Genoa, Italy, designed by Riccardo Morandi.
- The Fashion Island shopping mall in Newport Beach, California, designed by William Pereira and Welton Becket.
Buildings completed
- December – Tour du Midi, Brussels, Belgium.
- Avord Tower, Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada[6][7]
- El Menzah Sports Palace, Tunis, Tunisia.
- Ostankino Tower, Moscow, Russia; it will remain the tallest freestanding structure in the world until the completion of the CN Tower.
- Saint Joseph's Oratory in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
- Our Lady Help of Christians Church, Tile Cross, Birmingham, England, designed by Richard Gilbert Scott.
- The Kaknästornet TV Tower in Stockholm, Sweden.
- Berkeley Library, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland, designed by Ahrends, Burton and Koralek.
- Australia Square in Sydney, Australia.
- The Marine Midland Bank Building in Manhattan, New York, United States.
- The South Coast Plaza shopping mall in Costa Mesa, California, designed by Victor Gruen, is opened.
- Reliance Controls factory, Swindon, the last design by Team 4 (Richard Rogers, Norman Foster and their respective wives), considered the first example of High-tech architecture in the United Kingdom, is opened (demolished 1991).[8]
- First stage of Cumbernauld Town Centre, the main shopping centre for the New town of Cumbernauld, Scotland, widely accepted as the United Kingdom's first shopping mall and the world's first multi-level covered town centre (partly demolished 2001).[9]
- The first part of the Toronto-Dominion Bank Tower in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, designed by Mies van der Rohe; it becomes the tallest building in the British Commonwealth (1967–1972).
- Ypres Cloth Hall, reconstructed to its pre-World War I condition under the guidance of architects J. Coomans and P.A. Pauwels.
Awards
Births
Deaths
References