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Temple Hoyne Buell (September 9, 1895 – January 5, 1990) was an American architect, real estate developer and entrepreneur namesake of the Buell Theatre in Denver Center Complex, Buell & Company, and the Temple Buell Foundation. [1] Buell was born to a prominent Chicago family and the great-grandson of Thomas Hoyne.
Exhibit of student design projects, Temple Buell Architecture Gallery An architecture class meeting in Blicharski Atrium of Temple Buell Hall. The University of Illinois School of Architecture is an academic unit within the College of Fine & Applied Arts at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. The school is organized around six Program ...
Established as one of 37 public land-grant institutions established after the Morrill Land-Grant Colleges Act. The act was signed by Abraham Lincoln on July 2, 1862. The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding ...
Max Abramovitz, B.S. 1929, architect of the Avery Fisher Hall of Lincoln Center and Assembly Hall on the Illinois campus Chris Britt , 2003, editorial cartoonist Temple Hoyne Buell , B.S., 1916
The City and County of Denver’s Arts & Venues [2] owns and operates the three largest theaters in the Arts Complex – the Ellie Caulkins Opera House, the Temple Hoyne Buell Theatre and the Boettcher Concert Hall. The Helen Bonfils Theatre Complex within the Arts Complex is managed and operated by the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.
Temple Hoyne Buell – designed over 300 buildings in Colorado; designed the first ever shopping mall; Paul Byard (M.S.) – lawyer and architect; Rosario Candela (B.A. 1915) – Italian American architect; known for apartment building designs in New York City; Eric Cantor (M.S. 1989) – Congressman from Virginia and United States House ...
The construction of State Farm Center, originally known as the Assembly Hall, at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign consisted of building a huge indoor arena with a 400-foot-diameter (120 m) concrete dome whose center height is 125 feet (38 m) above the center floor, and which weighs 10 million pounds. [1]
Temple Hoyne Buell – architect for the first American central mall; Jeanne Gang, B.S. 1986 – architect; Walter Burley Griffin, B. Arch. 1899 – architect and designer of Canberra; Ralph Johnson, B. Arch 1971 – principal architect of the Perkins+Will; Arthur Rolland Kelly – B. Arch 1902; Ron Labinski – founder of HOK Sport [5]