Mart Port

Mart Port (4 January 1922 in Pärnu – 3 February 2012 in Tallinn) was an Estonian architect and pedagogue. He is mostly notable for being in the head of many statutory plans during the Soviet era, those including Tallinn, Tartu, Pärnu, Viljandi and Tallinn's districts Mustamäe, Väike-Õismäe and Lasnamäe. His most notable individual objects include the Viru Hotel (1968–1972), the building of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Estonia (now the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; with Raine Karp, Uno Tölpus and Olga Kontšajeva, 1966–1968), the "Planners' House" (Rävala pst 8; with Peep Jänes and Arvo Niineväli, 1965–1981) and the World War II Memorial in Maarjamäe (with Allan Murdmaa, Peep Jänes, Henno Sepmann and Rein Kersten, 1959–1960).

Biography

Mart Port was born in 1922 as a son of botanist Jaan Port (1891–1950) and his wife Marta. In the World War II Mart was mobilized to the Red Army. In 1950 he finished his architecture studies at the Tallinn Polytechnical Institute. 1955–1979 he served as the chairman of the Union of Soviet Estonian Architects.[1] Until 1990, Mart Port worked at the Soviet architectural bureau "Eesti Projekt", from 1961 to 1989 he served as its chief architect. He also worked as a docent at the State Art Institute of the ESSR from 1961 to 1992, and since 1977 as a professor. In 1972 he received the State Prize of the Estonian SSR, and in 1978 the title of People's Architect of the USSR.

Mart Port's son is sports biologist Kristjan Port (born 1960).

Mart Port died at the age of 90 on 3 February 2012 after a sudden disease.[2]

Gallery

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mart Port.
  1. "History of the Union of Estonian Architects". Union of Estonian Architects. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  2. Lamp, Berit-Helena (4 February 2012). "Suri arhitekt Mart Port". Postimees (in Estonian). Retrieved 23 March 2013.
Preceded by
?
Chairman of the Union of Soviet Estonian Architects
1955–1979
Succeeded by
Voldemar Herkel


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