The year 2001 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
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January 13 – Biblioteca Gallardo, one of the most important libraries in Central America, is among buildings destroyed in the January 2001 El Salvador earthquake .[1]
February 11 – Three Rivers Stadium , in Pittsburgh, United States, home of the Pittsburgh Pirates and Steelers , is demolished.
April – Proposals for the Grollo Tower in Melbourne , Australia, projected to become the tallest in the world at this time, are rejected by the local authority.
September 11 – September 11 attacks : World Trade Center in New York City (designed by Minoru Yamasaki ) is destroyed, and The Pentagon is heavily damaged by hijacked airliners. In New York, St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church is completely destroyed; and the Deutsche Bank Building and Fiterman Hall are subsequently demolished due to severe damage.
December 15 – Preservation efforts having been completed on the Leaning Tower of Pisa , it reopens to the public after 12 years of reconstruction.[2]
unknown date – 6a architects is established by Stephanie Macdonald and Tom Emerson in London.[3]
Buildings opened
Milwaukee Art Museum
Gateshead Millennium Bridge
January 26 – Sendai Mediatheque , Japan, designed by Toyo Ito .[4]
March 11 – National Museum of Australia in Canberra , designed by Howard Raggatt [5]
March 17 – Eden Project , St Austell , Cornwall , UK, designed by Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners .
April – Magna Science Adventure Centre , Rotherham , Yorkshire , UK, designed by Wilkinson Eyre . It wins this year's Stirling Prize .
May 4
June 28 – Gehry Tower (designed by Frank Gehry ) in Hanover , Germany.
June 30 – National Space Centre , Leicester , England, by Nicholas Grimshaw & Partners .
September 9
September 17 – Gateshead Millennium Bridge , a pedestrian tilt bridge for spanning the River Tyne , UK, designed by architects Wilkinson Eyre and structural engineers Gifford . It wins the 2002 Stirling Prize .
September 23 – Saint Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral, Yerevan (Armenian Apostolic Church ), designed by Stepan Kurkchyan.
November – Kodak Theatre in Hollywood , constructed to host the Academy Awards .[7]
November 15 – Palms Casino Resort in Paradise, Nevada , USA, designed by The Jerde Partnership .
November 21 – Cologne Tower inaugurated; designed by Kohl & Kohl and Jean Nouvel .
December 10 – Puente de la Mujer , a pedestrian swing cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge spanning a dock in Buenos Aires , Argentina, designed by Santiago Calatrava , inaugurated.
December 11 – American Folk Art Museum in New York City , USA, inaugurated; designed by Tod Williams Billie Tsien Architects .
date unknown
Buildings completed
The Gasometer, Vienna , Austria
Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim , Norway
October 30 – Redevelopment of Gasometer, Vienna , by Jean Nouvel , Coop Himmelb(l)au , Manfred Wehdorn and Wilhelm Holzbauer is completed.[9]
date unknown
88 Wood Street office building, City of London , by Richard Rogers .
Caja General de Ahorros , Granada , by Alberto Campo Baeza .
Betty and Gordon Moore Library in the Centre for Mathematical Sciences (Cambridge) , UK, designed by Edward Cullinan Architects.
Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria , Egypt[10]
DG Bank building in Berlin , Germany, by Frank Gehry .[11]
Telekom Tower building, in Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia.
One Wall Centre opens in Vancouver , British Columbia, Canada, by architects Perkins+Will Canada .
Ku’damm-Eck (office building) in Berlin , Germany, by Gerkan, Marg und Partner .
Neues Kranzler Eck (office building) in Berlin, Germany, by Helmut Jahn .
Tower 2000 , the first building in the Moscow International Business Centre , Russia.
Nidaros Cathedral , Trondheim , Norway (officially completed)[12]
Exhibition building at Scotland 's National Museum of Rural Life completed by Page\Park Architects .
Building D, Giudecca , Venice , by Cino Zucchi.
Jacobs Ladder (house) at Chinnor , England, by Niall McLaughlin Architects .
"About Us" . Apartheid Museum . Retrieved August 29, 2024 .
Interior Spaces: Space, Light, Materials . De Gruyter. 2012. p. 14.
Ekroll, Øystein Nidaros Cathedral: The West Front Sculptures (Trondheim Nidarosdomen. 2006) ISBN 978-8276930634