Overview of the events of 1996 in architecture
The year 1996 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Buildings and structures
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Buildings completed
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Niterói Contemporary Art Museum, Brazil
The Dancing House in Prague, Czech Republic
- Niterói Contemporary Art Museum, Brazil, designed by Oscar Niemeyer.
- Eco Building at Horniman Museum, London, designed by Architype.
- Fruit Museum, Yamanashi, Japan, designed by Itsuko Hasegawa.[3]
- Aukrust Centre, Alvdal, Norway, designed by Sverre Fehn.
- Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre in Melbourne, Australia, designed by Denton Corker Marshall.
- Shun Hing Square, Shenzhen, designed by K. Y. Cheung Design Associates, the tallest building in Asia until it is surpassed the following year.[4]
- Therme Vals in Switzerland, designed by Peter Zumthor.
- The Dancing House (Nationale-Nederlanden building) in Prague, designed by Vlado Milunić with Frank Gehry.
- Maggie's Centre, Edinburgh, a drop-in cancer care centre; building conversion by Richard Murphy.
- Orphanage (first stage), Chhebetor, Nepal, designed by Hans Olav Hesseberg and Sixten Rahiff of Bergen School of Architecture.
- 81 Mill Street, Osney, Oxford, England, a house designed for himself by Adrian James.