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The year 1861 in architecture involved some significant architectural event and new buildings.
Buildings and structures
Buildings completed
- Arlington Street Church in Boston, Massachusetts, United States, designed by Arthur Gilman.
 - St James the Less, Pimlico, London, designed by George Edmund Street.
 - All Saints Notting Hill, London, designed by William White in 1852.
 - St. Michael's Church, Berlin, designed by August Soller (who is buried here) in 1845 and completed by Richard Lucae (his nephew), Andreas Simons and Martin Gropius.
 - Tromsø Cathedral, Norway, designed by Christian Heinrich Grosch.
 - Palácio do Grão-Pará, Petrópolis, Brazil, designed by Theodore Marx with de Araújo Porto Alegre.
 - Mary Birdsall House in Richmond, Indiana.
 
Awards
- RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Jean-Baptiste Lesueur.
 - Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: Constant Moyaux.
 
Births
- January 6 – Victor Horta, Belgian architect and designer (died 1947)[1]
 - April 20 – Hermann Muthesius, German architect and writer on architecture (died 1927)
 - July 17 – Horace Field, English architect (died 1948)
 - September 2 – Arthur Beresford Pite, English architect (died 1934)
 
Deaths
- May 15 – Benjamin Woodward, Irish architect (born 1816)[2]
 - October 13 – Sir William Cubitt, English civil engineer (born 1785)
 
References
- ↑ Aubry, Françoise; Vandenbreeden, Jos (1996). Horta — Art Nouveau to Modernism. Ghent: Ludion Press. ISBN 0-8109-6333-7.
 - ↑ Dodgson, Campbell (1901). . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography (1st supplement). London: Smith, Elder & Co.
 
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