16 of the Most Famous Architects Who Ever Lived howstuffworks.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from howstuffworks.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Gwendolyn Washington, Hyde Park
When our questioner Gwendolyn was growing up in the Francis Apartments at 43rd Street and Forrestville Avenue in what is today Bronzeville, she had no idea it was designed by one of the world’s most famous architects. And it’s easy to see why.
It looked nothing like the low-slung geometric Prairie Style that Wright is best known for, nor his other famous buildings like Unity Temple in Oak Park or Fallingwater in Pennsylvania.
That’s because the Francis Apartments were designed in 1895, early in Wright’s career when his style was still heavily indebted to his onetime boss and mentor Louis Sullivan.
Insights on Contemporary Mentorship in Architecture and How to Navigate It archinect.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archinect.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
لویی سالیوان متولد 3 سپتامبر 1856 در بوستون، ماساچوست چشم به جهان گشود.
این معمار بزرگ آمریکایی که در قرن بیستم میزیست سبک مدرنیسم را دنبال میکرد و به عنوان پدر آسمانخراشها معروف شد.
او یکی از اعضای بلندپایه فراکسیون مکتب معماری شیگاگو بود.
او دوران کودکی را در کنار خانواده خود در اطراف شهر بوستون گذراند.
مادر سالیوان اهل سوئیس ولی پدرش ایرلندیتبار بود.
لویی سالیوان در کودکی به طبیعت و یادگیری مهارتهای کشاورزی پرداخت.
قبل از اینکه مسیر کاری زندگی خود را بخواهد انتخاب کند به درون شهر بوستون سفری چندماهه داشت و در مورد تمامی کسب و کارها اطل�
The Sixth International Conference on AIDS, held in San Francisco in 1990, erupted in protest as activists took to the streets and the conference hall demanding a voice. Now, a new exhibition at the city s reopened main library looks back at that historic event.
Photographer Rick Gerharter, a freelancer whose photos have graced the pages of the Bay Area Reporter for decades, was in the streets and inside the convention with members of ACT UP and other activists, documenting their demonstration against discriminatory U.S. immigration policies, lack of attention to women with AIDS, and inadequate funding to support the San Francisco model of community-based care.