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Pages in category "1917 establishments in Illinois" The following 37 pages are in this category, out of 37 total. ... Alexander Graham Bell School (Chicago) B.
1930s-1960s Illinois Institute of Technology, including S.R. Crown Hall, Second Chicago School, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 1934 Field Building , Graham, Anderson, Probst & White
Bodil Kjær (born 1932), interior design and office furniture; Hanne Kjærholm (1930–2009), own firm, professor at Danish Academy; Signe Kongebro (born 1972), partner at Henning Larsen Architects with responsibility for sustainability; Eva Koppel (1916–2006), Brutalist-style public buildings
Harrington College of Design (1931–2015) was a for-profit college in the Loop area of Chicago, Illinois, US, that closed in 2015. [1] It offered students programs leading to either a master's , bachelor's or associate's degree upon completion of the interior design , digital photography or communication design programs.
Chicago, Illinois: 1997: 185,000: Best Healthcare Facility, 1999 Contract Magazine Big "I" International Interior Awards Design Excellence Award, 1998 AIA Chicago Chapter Interior Design Award, 1998 IIDA Oak Park Public Library: Oak Park, Illinois: 2003: 104,000: Signage & Environmental Graphics Category, 2005 American Corporate Identity Annual
David Adler FAIA (January 3, 1882 – September 27, 1949) was an American architect who mostly practiced around Chicago, Illinois.He was prolific throughout his career, designing over 200 buildings in over thirty-five years.
January 19 – E. R. Robson, English school architect (born 1836) February 8 – Thomas Arboe, Danish railway station architect (born 1837) July 2 – Gerald Horsley, English architect (born 1862) August 4 – C. W. Stephens, English commercial architect (born c.1845) September 23 – Robert Swain Peabody, Boston architect (born 1845)
From 1912 to 1917, the Fine Arts Building housed the Chicago Little Theatre, an art theater credited with beginning the Little Theatre Movement in the United States. Not being able to afford rental on the building's 500-seat auditorium, co-producers Maurice Browne and Ellen Van Volkenburg rented a large storage space on the fourth floor at the back and built it out into a 91-seat house. [14]