Ferdinand Boberg
Gustaf Ferdinand Boberg was a Swedish architect.
Biography
Boberg was born in Falun. He became one of the most productive and prominent architects of Stockholm around the turn of the 20th century. Among his most famous work is an electrical plant at Björns Trädgård in Stockholm, that was inspired by Middle Eastern architecture. The building was converted in the late nineties and is now the Stockholm Mosque. He also designed Nordiska Kompaniet, the most prominent department store in Stockholm and Rosenbad which today houses the Swedish government chancellery.Boberg's only international exhibition building that remains in existence today - the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair Swedish Pavilion - remains standing in Lindsborg, Kansas.
After retiring as an architect in 1915, Boberg and his wife Anna traveled around Sweden with the aim of preserving the cultural heritage through a book of drawings. Over 3,000 sketches were made and around 1,000 drawings were published in the volume Svenska bilder.
Boberg died in Stockholm, aged 86.
Famous works
- , Stockholm
- , Hallsberg
- , Gävle
- , Stockholm
- , Saltsjöbaden
- ,, Hjorthagen, Stockholm
- , Stocksund, Stockholm
- , Djursholm, built for the artist Robert Thegerström
- Central [Post Office Building (Stockholm)|Central post office, Stockholm]
- , Norra Bantorget, Stockholm
- , Stockholm
- Central Post [Office Building, Malmö]
- , Stockholm
- Katarina power station, Stockholm, now Stockholm Mosque, inaugurated in 2000
- ,, Hjorthagen, Stockholm
- Swedish Pavilion at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair, later moved to Lindsborg, Kansas
- , Djurgården, Stockholm
- Thiel Gallery, Djurgården, Stockholm, home of the banker Ernest Thiel, now art museum
- Waldemarsudde, Djurgården, built for Prince Eugen who was also an artist, now museum
- , built for the Industrial Fair in Norrköping 1906, moved to Nyköping 1907
- , Stockholm. Now home to Fotografiska Stockholm
- , Stockholm
- , Trosa
- , Djurgården
- Uppenbarelsekyrkan
- , Varaslätten
- Margareta Pavilion at the 1914 Baltic Exhibition in Malmö
- Nordiska Kompaniet, NK department store, Stockholm
- , his own home on Djurgården 1903 to 1925