Frederick Romberg
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Frederick_Romberg an entity of type: Thing
Frederick Romberg, (Friedrich Sigismund Hermann Romberg), (21 June 1913, in Tsingtao – 12 November 1992, in Melbourne), was a Swiss-trained architect who migrated to Australia in 1938, and became a leading figure in the development of Modernism in his adopted city.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Frederick Romberg
rdf:langString
Frederick Romberg
rdf:langString
Frederick Romberg
rdf:langString
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
xsd:date
1992-11-12
rdf:langString
Tsingtao, China
xsd:date
1913-06-21
xsd:integer
26938247
xsd:integer
1107121851
rdf:langString
Stanhill Flats, Newburn Flats, ETA Foods Factory, MacFarland Library, Ormond College, ICI Staff Recreation Centre, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church
rdf:langString
Inaugural President’s prize, National Architecture 2006 - National 25 Year Award
xsd:date
1913-06-21
rdf:langString
Frederick Romberg in 1937
xsd:date
1992-11-12
rdf:langString
German
rdf:langString
Frederick Romberg, (Friedrich Sigismund Hermann Romberg), (21 June 1913, in Tsingtao – 12 November 1992, in Melbourne), was a Swiss-trained architect who migrated to Australia in 1938, and became a leading figure in the development of Modernism in his adopted city. Romberg was best known as the "middle term" in the architectural partnership of ‘Gromboyd‘ - Grounds, Romberg and Boyd (1953-1962), as well as for some landmark apartment buildings in 1940s Melbourne. He brought an awareness of great European academic tradition, and the Modernist architecture of Switzerland and Germany, re-formed into architecture appropriate to Australia. His buildings are characteristically empiricist in intention and form, using local materials within the formal framework of modernism.
rdf:langString
Grounds Romberg and Boyd , later Romberg and Boyd
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
15857