1822 in architecture
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Buildings and structures 
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The year 1822 in architecture involved some significant events.
Buildings completed

Banqueting Room, Royal Pavilion, Brighton, by the architect, John Nash
- Piazza del Popolo, Rome, by Giuseppe Valadier, completed.
 - Saint David's Building, the original home of St David's College, Lampeter, Wales, by Charles Cockerell.
 - Reconstruction and new prison buildings at Chester Castle, England, by Thomas Harrison.
 - St Pancras New Church, London, by William and Henry William Inwood.
 - Kalupur Swaminarayan Mandir, Ahmedabad, British Raj.
 - Assembly Rooms, Aberdeen, Scotland, by Archibald Simpson.
 - Second Chestnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia, United States, by William Strickland.
 - Main building of Government Palace (Finland) in Helsinki Senate Square, by Carl Ludvig Engel.
 - Façade of Register House, Princes Street, Edinburgh, Scotland, by Robert Reid.[1]
 - Reconstruction of Royal Pavilion, Brighton, England by John Nash.
 - Yelagin Palace, Saint Petersburg, by Carlo Rossi.
 - Cartland Bridge, Scotland, by Thomas Telford.[2]
 - Pont de pierre (Bordeaux), by Jean-Baptiste Billaudel and Claude Deschamps.[3]
 
Awards
- Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Émile Gilbert.
 
Births
- January 9 - Carol Benesch, Silesian and Romanian architect (died 1896)
 - April 27 - Frederick Law Olmsted, American landscape architect (died 1903)
 - September 12 - Philip Charles Hardwick, English architect (died 1892)
 - December 6 - David Stirling, Scottish-born Dominion architect for federal works in Nova Scotia (died 1887)
 - December - Frank Wills, English-born architect working in North America (died 1857)
 
Deaths
- John Bowden, Irish ecclesiastical architect
 - Luigi Rusca, Swiss architect working in Russia (born 1762)
 
References
- ↑ "History of Edinburgh". Visions of Scotland. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
 - ↑ "Lanark, Lanark Road, Cartland Bridge". Canmore. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. 2007. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
 - ↑ "Pont de Pierre". Structurae (in French). Retrieved 2015-02-13.
 
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