1933 in architecture
The year 1933 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
- The Bauhaus school in Berlin is permanently closed by the Nazi government.
- Modern Architectural Research Group established as a think tank by younger architects and critics involved in the modernist movement in Great Britain.
- Completion of restoration of Herstmonceux Castle in England by Walter Godfrey.
Buildings and structures
Buildings opened
- February 21 – Nebotičnik skyscraper, Ljubljana, Yugoslavia, designed by Vladimir Šubic.
- July – New Midland Hotel, Morecambe, Lancashire, England, designed by Oliver Hill.
- August 23 – Leeds Civic Hall, Yorkshire, England, designed by Vincent Harris in 1926.
- November 29 – Schwandbach Bridge, Switzerland, designed by Robert Maillart.
- Royal Masonic Hospital at Ravenscourt Park in London, designed by Thomas S. Tait of Sir John Burnet, Tait and Lorne.
- Labworth Café on Canvey Island, England, designed by engineer Ove Arup.
Buildings completed
- St Gabriel's Anglican Church in Blackburn, England, designed by F. X. Velarde.
- Városmajori Roman Catholic church in Budapest, completed by Bertalan Árkay following the death in 1932 of his father Aladár Árkay.
- Myer Emporium renovation, Bourke Street, Melbourne, Australia.
- The Round House, designed by Berthold Lubetkin's Tecton Architectural Group to house gorillas at London Zoo, one of the first modernist buildings in Britain.
- Battersea Power Station, London, with Giles Gilbert Scott as consultant architect, begins operation.
- College Hall, Royal Air Force College Cranwell, England, designed by James Grey West.
- Mardon Hall, first of the University of Exeter Halls of Residence in England, designed by Vincent Harris.
- Darbishire Quad at Somerville College, Oxford, England, designed by Morley Horder.
- Mercado de Abastos de Algeciras, Spain, designed by Eduardo Torroja.
- Villa Markelius in Stockholm, designed by Sven Markelius for himself.
- in Löbau, Germany, designed by Hans Scharoun.
- Engel House, White City (Tel Aviv), Mandatory Palestine, designed by Zeev Rechter.
- Töss Footbridge, Winterthur, Switzerland, designed by Robert Maillart.
Awards
- AIA Gold Medal – Ragnar Östberg.
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Charles Reed Peers.
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture – Alexandre Courtois.
Publications
- John Betjeman – Ghastly Good Taste, or the depressing story of the rise and fall of British architecture.The Information Book of Sir John Burnet, Tait & Lorne.
Births
- February 2 – Rodney Gordon, British architect
- June 25 – Álvaro Siza Vieira, Portuguese architect and architectural educator
- July 23
- * Raimund Abraham, Austrian architect
- * Richard Rogers, Italian-born British modernist and functionalist architect
- October 29 – John Andrews, Australian architect
- November 4 – Terje Moe, Norwegian architect
- November 24 - Isaac Fola-Alade, Nigerian architect
Deaths
- January – Edward Lippincott Tilton, American architect based in New York
- March 10 – Émile André, French architect, artist and furniture designer
- April 16 – Harold Peto, English architect and garden designer
- August 8
- * Luca Beltrami, Italian architect and architectural historian
- * Adolf Loos, Austrian/Czechoslovak architect and writer
- December 4 – W. G. R. Sprague, British theatre architect
- December 24 – Sir Frank Baines, English architect