1999 in architecture
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Buildings and structures  | 
The year 1999 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
- April 19 - The Bundestag holds its first meeting at the Reichstag building in Berlin (following a redesign by Norman Foster) since 1933.[1]
 
Buildings opened

London Eye seen from Westminster Bridge
- March - Pero's Bridge in Bristol, England, designed by Eilis O'Connell with Ove Arup & Partners.
 - October 8 - The new Embassy of the United States, Ottawa, Canada, designed by David Childs, is dedicated by President Bill Clinton.
 - December - Burj al Arab, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
 - December 31 
- London Eye, designed by David Marks and Julia Barfield.
 - Millennium Dome in London, designed by Richard Rogers.
 
 
Buildings completed
- March - Main Tower in Frankfurt, Germany.
 - Jewish Museum, Berlin, designed by Daniel Libeskind.[2]
 - Lille Cathedral in France (Basilica of Notre Dame de la Treille), begun in 1854.
 - Great Court of the British Museum, redesigned by Norman Foster.
 - Conde Nast Building in Manhattan, New York City, United States.
 - Jubilee Line Extension of the London Underground Jubilee line.
 - Melbourne Museum by architects Denton Corker Marshall, Melbourne, Australia.
 - The Lighthouse (Glasgow), a conversion by Page\Park Architects of John Keppie's offices for The Glasgow Herald, opens as Scotland's Centre for Architecture, Design and the City.
 
Awards
- AIA Gold Medal - Frank Gehry.
 - Architecture Firm Award - Perkins and Will.
 - Grand Prix de l'urbanisme - Philippe Panerai and Nathan Starkman.
 - Grand prix national de l'architecture - Massimiliano Fuksas.
 - Praemium Imperiale Architecture Laureate – Fumihiko Maki
 - Pritzker Architecture Prize - Norman Foster.
 - Prix de l'Académie d'Architecture de France - Jean Nouvel.
 - RAIA Gold Medal - Richard Leplastrier.
 - Royal Gold Medal - Barcelona.
 - Stirling Prize - Future Systems, Media Centre at Lord's.
 - Thomas Jefferson Medal in Architecture – Richard Rogers.
 - Twenty-five Year Award - John Hancock Center.
 - UIA Gold Medal – Ricardo Legorreta Vilchis.
 - Vincent Scully Prize - Vincent Scully.
 
Deaths
- January 14 - Aldo van Eyck, Dutch Structuralist architect (born 1918)[3]
 - January 23 - Jay Pritzker, US entrepreneur, founder of the Pritzker Architecture Prize (born 1922)
 - August 15 - Sir Hugh Casson, British architect, interior designer, artist, writer and broadcaster on 20th-century design (born 1910)
 - October 27 - Charlotte Perriand, French architect and designer (born 1903)[4]
 
References
- ↑ Reichstag Berlin International
 - ↑ Jewish Museum Berlin. "A Perfectly Normal Museum?". Retrieved 9 December 2014.
 - ↑ "Aldo van Eyck". Team 10 On line. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
 - ↑ Charlotte Perriand by Elisabeth Vedrenne. Assouline, November 2005. ISBN 2-84323-661-4.
 
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