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architect and Simon
* Simon Louis du Ry, architect ( 1726-1799 ).
It was designed by architect Louis A. Simon under Postmaster General James Farley.
* Simon Lake ( 1866 – 1945 ), mechanical engineer and naval architect.
Mr. Simon is commonly acknowledged as a legendary architect of the modern conservative movement.
Simon Lake ( September 4, 1866-June 23, 1945 ) was a Quaker American mechanical engineer and naval architect who obtained over two hundred patents for advances in naval design and competed with John Philip Holland to build the first submarines for the United States Navy.
His friends were Henri Poincaré physicist, count Eugéne Aymar de la Baume, Joseph Vallot ( who was the richest man in France ), Gustave Eiffel architect, prince Roland Bonaparte, Camille Chautemps Prime-Minister, a French entrepreneur called Devousoud from Chamonix, Simon Newcomb American astronomer and admiral,
The first Baron was the son of Andrew Archer, the grandson of Thomas Archer, the great-grandson of Sir Simon Archer and the nephew of the architect Thomas Archer.
The French-born architect Simon De la Vallée started the planning of the building, but was killed by a Swedish nobleman in 1642.
One was designed by a group around the architect Simon Ungers from Hamburg ; it consisted of 85x85 m square of steel girders on top of concrete blocks located on the corners.
The architect Frank Worthington Simon included in his plans for the Manitoba Legislative Building a new Government House, to be constructed on the bank of the Assiniboine River, opposite the parliament.
Nevertheless, some historians maintain their original, higher estimates, among them Stalin biographer Simon Sebag Montefiore, Perestroika architect and former head of the Presidential Committee for the Rehabilitation of Victims of Political Repression Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev, and the director of Yale's " Annals of Communism " series Jonathan Brent, putting the death toll at about 20 million.
A large site was chosen near Marne Barracks, beside the A1, and in 2002 Simon Pierce of Austin-Smith: Lord was chosen as the new museum's architect.
Groothuizen would subsequently coproduce and engineer the debut album for British chansonnier Simon Warner in 1996 before taking on a new career as an architect and lecturer.
Simon is an architect whose plans never seem very practical nor work.
It was designed as a multi-use facility including City Hall, and the police and fire departments by architect Smith Hoag and built by contractor Simon Brink in 1889 for a cost of $ 25, 000.

architect and du
There were only two conditions to acquire a lot: 1-a token tax of 5 shillings ( 5 sols ) per arpent of land should be paid every year ($ 0. 03 per per year in 2005 US dollars ); 2-a house should be built on the lot according to the plans and models established by the Surintendant des Bâtiments du Roi ( architect in chief of the royal demesne ).
* January 1903: the Moulin Rouge reopened after renovation and improvement work carried out by Niermans, the most “ Parisian ” architect of the Belle Époque ( amongst other works he designed the brasserie Mollard, the Paris Casino, the Folies Bergère in Paris, the Palace Hôtel in Ostend in Belgium, the rebuilding of the Hôtel du Palais in Biarritz and the creation of the Hôtel Négresco on the Promenade des Anglais in Nice ).
* Jacques du Broeucq, painter and architect ( 16th century, birth in Mons is uncertain )
Less noted is his published call in 1749 for the roofing-over of Perrault's classical colonnaded east front of the Palais du Louvre and the clearing away of the ramshackle structures, both those that had been built against it, in order to form a proper Place du Louvre, and those in the centre of the Cour Carré itself Sections of the palace were in danger of collapse, scarcely touched by royal indifference after 1678 ; work did begin in 1755 to clear the facade of the Louvre, overseen by the architect Jacques-Germain Soufflot and Marigny, supervisor of the Bâtiments du Roi.
He visited France, while in Paris he spent several days at the Musée du Louvre ; Italy, in Rome he sketched, antiquities sculptures and paintings at the Vatican Museums and other galleries, then on to Naples and Pompeii, Bari then to Corfu ; while in Italy Barry had met Charles Lock Eastlake, an architect Mr Kinnaird and a Mr Johnson ( later a professor at Haileybury and Imperial Service College ) with these gentlemen he visited Greece, where their itinerary covered Athens which they left on 25 June 1818, Mount Parnassus, Delphi, Aegina, then the Cyclades, including Delos to Smyrna and Turkey where Barry greatly admired the magnificence of Hagia Sophia, from Constantinople he visited the Troad, Assos, Pergamon and back to Smyrna.
Today the exposition's sole physical remnant is the Théâtre du Rond-Point des Champs-Élysées designed by architect Gabriel Davioud, which originally housed the Panorama National.
Image: Québec-Hôtel du Parlement 3. jpg | Parliament Building ( 1877-1887 ), Quebec City, Quebec, Eugène-Étienne Taché, architect
Guigues du Pin, or Guigo, the architect of the order, cautioned, " Let the brethren take care the books they receive from the cupboard do not get soiled with smoke or dirt ; books are as it were the everlasting food of our souls ; we wish them to be most carefully kept and most zealously made.
The Château de Clagny in Versailles was built between 1674 and 1680 from the drawings of Jules Hardouin-Mansart, Premier architecte du Roi, ( First architect of the King ), on land bought by Louis XIV in 1665.
It is home to the Musée d ' art et d ' histoire du judaïsme and the Agoudas Hakehilos synagogue designed by the architect Guimard.
* Flora and bas-reliefs for the southern facade of the Pavillon de Flore, Palais du Louvre, for architect Hector Lefuel, 1865
Returning to France he was patronized by Cardinal du Bellay at Lyon, and was sent by him about 1540 to Paris, where he began the Chateau de St Maur-des-Fossés, and enjoyed royal favour ; in 1545 he was made architect to Francis I of France and given the charge of works in Brittany.
The architect Armand-Claude Mollet possessed a property fronting on the road to the village of Roule, west of Paris ( now the Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré ), and backing onto royal property, the Grand Cours through the Champs-Élysées.
The abbey was secularised in 1535, and in 1541, for Cardinal Jean du Bellay, bishop of Paris, the architect Philibert Delorme designed a château on the site, on four ranges of building around a square central court.
* Joseph Duhr, “ La concile de Ravenne in 898: la réhabilitation du pape Formose ,” Recherches de science religieuse 22 ( 1932 ), pp. 541ff, discusses Ravenna council acta of 898, an important source and political circumstances ; argues Lambert could not have been its architect
The Compagnie Eiffage du Viaduc de Millau, working with the architect Sir Norman Foster, was successful in obtaining the tender.
King Francis I of France took him into his service, and appointed him architect in charge of the building projects at the Palais du Louvre, which transformed the old château into the palace that we know.
To provide for the Hall of Mirrors as well as the salon de la guerre and the salon de la paix, which connect the grand appartement du roi with the grand appartement de la reine, architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart appropriated three rooms from each apartment as well as the terrace that separated the two apartments ( Marie, 1968 ; 1977l Verlet, 1985a ).
The building that currently houses the library, was constructed between 1872 and 1874 for the Union du Crédit and designed by architect Désiré De Keyser ( 1823-1897 ).
The mezzanine contains a large illuminated mural sculpture by the architect, entitled Thème des mouvements du soleil (" theme of the sun's motion ").
The technical innovation was presented in Dezallier d ' Argenville's La theorie et la pratique du jardinage ( 1709 ), which was translated into English by the architect John James ( 1712 ):

architect and rebuilt
The Rotunda and the Edicule's exterior were rebuilt in 1809 – 1810 by architect Komminos of Mytilene in the then current Ottoman Baroque style.
The Commons Chamber was rebuilt after the war under the architect Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, in a simplified version of the old chamber's style.
It was rebuilt by the architect Nicholas Revett in the style of the 18th century Gothic revival.
The original façade and parts of monastery are in Lombard Romanesque style, some chapels in International Gothic, while the rest of building, include the big dome, was rebuilt in Baroque and Neoclassic style, by the Sardinian architect Antonio Cano in 1829-34.
The building suffered greatly in World War I, and the meticulous restoration work of architect Henri Deneux rebuilt it from its ruins over the following 40 years.
In baroque style of the 17th century, was rebuilt by the architect Ferdinando Sanfelice.
( His father, Benjamin Henry Latrobe, was the architect who rebuilt the United States Capitol in Washington, D. C. after the War of 1812.
It was partly rebuilt in the latter half of the nineteenth century by architect Paul Abadie.
After the town was ravaged by a blaze in 1812 it was extensively rebuilt in a Biedermeier style according to plans by architect Joseph Kornhäusel, it is therefore sometimes referred to as the Biedermeierstadt.
* The Royal Cambridge Music Hall, 136 Commercial Street ( 1864 – 1936 ), was destroyed by fire in 1896, then rebuilt in 1897 by Finch Hill, architect of the Britannia Theatre, in nearby Hoxton.
Isaac Hodgson was the architect for the rebuilt courthouse, which was first occupied in January 1861 ; the total cost, including the reconstruction, totaled $ 54, 624. 05.
Meanwhile, Piraeus was rebuilt to the famous grid plan of architect Hippodamus of Miletus, called the Hippodamian plan, and thus the main agora of the city was named after him in honour.
The hall was restored and the external staircase and gable ends were rebuilt in 1854-5, under the direction of R. M. Phipson, the chief architect of the Diocese of Norwich, in which Aldeburgh then stood.
After the Foundation took control of the building in 1979, it took steps to expand gallery space ; by 1985, " all of the rooms on the main floor had been converted into galleries ... the white Istrian stone facade and the unique canal terrace had been restored ", and a protruding arcade wing, called the barchessa, had been rebuilt by architect Giorgio Bellavitis.
After the Foundation took control of the building in 1979, it took steps to expand gallery space ; by 1985, " all of the rooms on the main floor had been converted into galleries ... the white Istrian stone facade and the unique canal terrace had been restored " and a protruding arcade wing, called the barchessa, had been rebuilt by architect Giorgio Bellavitis.
When the Marshall House burned in 1916, it was rebuilt in fire-resistant brick the following year to designs by noted Portland architect John Calvin Stevens.
The city was rebuilt between 1880 and 1890 in fireproof materials and in a more planned fashion, with characteristically ornate Victorian buildings, many designed by Charles C. Rittenhouse, the first practicing architect in Adams County and also mayor for ten years.
Even more famous than SAPPI is the Fagus Werk, rebuilt in 1910-1915 after the blueprints of architect Walter-Gropius, what is said to be trend-setting for modern architecture.
In 1870 or just before 1875, they were refaced and partly rebuilt for Rowland Egerton-Warburton of Arley Hall by the architect John Douglas.
The eastern parts of the building have been restored in several phases, the most recent being in the 1970s when the architect Lawrence King rebuilt the crossing.
However, after falling into disrepair it was rebuilt in the late 19th century by architect, Arthur Blomfield.
The original hall was destroyed by fire and rebuilt in 1829, in a Gothic Revival style, by Norfolk architect William John Donthorne.
It was rebuilt after 1696 in a typical French classical style by Ventabren, an architect, who gave it its unique feature for a sea port.
He lavished attention on the Elizabethan Arbury Hall which he rebuilt over a period of thirty years in splendid Gothic Renaissance style, engaging the services of the architect Henry Couchman.
In 1876-77 this desolate ruin was brought back to life as a place of worship after centuries of neglect, when four of the original seven bays of the nave were rebuilt on the old foundations in Neo-Romanesque style by the Gothic Revival architect C. C.

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