Word: architect
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...Architectural department has adopted a new system in the instruction of design. The work in advanced design is carried on with the co-operation of prominent architect, who have been appointed as lectures on architectural design, and who act with the Professor of architecture as instructor in the advanced courses. Each of these architects successively has charge of a problem upon which he criticizes the preliminary sketches, directs the evolution of the final drawings by individual criticisms of each student's work over his drawing board, and delivers before the class a criticism of the results...
...Department of Architecture is to put in operation next year a new plan for advanced instruction in architectural design. Five prominent architects have been appointed by the Corporation to co-operate with the present instructors in the department in carrying out this plan. These architects are Mr. R. S. Peabody of Boston, lately President of the American Institute of Architects, of the firm of Peabody & Stearns; Mr. F. M. Day of Philadelphia. Vice-President of the American Institute of Architects; Mr. E. M. Wheelwright, lately City Architect of Boston, of the firm of Wheelwright & Haven; Mr. R. C. Sturgis...
...Buildings" this evening at 8 o'clock in the Fogg Lecture Room, under the auspices of the Memorial Society. Drawings, plans and photographs of the Yard and its buildings will be shown by lantern slides. Mr. Shurtleff will explain from the point of view of a landscape architect how well the Yard has been laid out, and also how it may be improved...
...cost of the whole including five brick posts and iron fencing, will be $5,000. Mr. A. W. Longfellow, Jr., '76, is the architect...
...exists at the present day, is the outcome of successive transformations and additions, the first royal residence on the site having been the hunting-lodge erected by Louis XIII. This was added to by his son, who used it for a similar purpose, and who had the architect, Le Vau, add largely to the accommodations and change it into a residence worthy of the sovereign of a rich and powerful nation. Later Mansart set to work in his turn, and increased the size and splendor of Versailles around which, in the meantime, the king had caused a city to rise...