「ARCHITECT」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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| xactly a plan in Abraham Swann's The British | Architect, a book known to have been in Stone's librar |
| My | Architect: A Son's Journey is a 2003 documentary film |
| John C. Williams | Architect, a New Orleans architecture firm hired as th |
| 8, Van Reeth became the first Flemish Master | Architect, a function he held until 1 June 2005 when M |
| I. Kahn, quote from the documentary film “My | Architect, A Son's Journey” a film by his son Nathanie |
| ncluding the three failed attempts) cost the | architect a total of £1,153 18s. |
| For CEI, Dan Galorath worked to | architect a more user-friendly software estimation pro |
| Education Of An | Architect A Point Of View (1988,1999) |
| The building was completed in 1910 by the | architect A. Boyer, who designed a ground floor with l |
| Architect A. Taylor of Kansas City was hired to develo | |
| Opened in 1913 as Danziger Strasse ( | architect A. Grenander) as a iron station on stone col |
| Length of platform: 120 m | Architect: A. Kazakov. |
| coration of the building was directed by the | architect A. Schusev. |
| In 1964 | architect A. Quincy Jones designed a master plan for c |
| Greek Revival architecture, and some work of | architect A. Ten Eyck Brown and some property controll |
| Architect A. Ten Eyck Brown made architectural plans f | |
| , Colston Bassett was erected in 1892 by the | architect A. W. Brewill.. |
| Bridge in Kiev, Ukraine was designed by the | architect A. Gavrilov ("Mostobud") and a group of engi |
| Designed by the | architect A. Nyberg and completed in 1913, it was crea |
| It was originally designed by | architect A. F. Granstedt, but after becoming an embas |
| ower was constructed based on the project of | architect A. Vidov as one of two towers of the Taitsky |
| It was designed by | architect A. H. Downey as a combination convent and sc |
| The | architect A. Mardon Mowbray restored the building in 1 |
| The Venetian Bridge, designed by | architect A. Ilyashenko and engineered by V. Koval, wa |
| She was the daughter of the | architect A.D.R. Caroe and her grandfathers were W.D. |
| It was build by the great | architect A.Grenander in 1902. |
| The Episcopal Church was designed by | architect A.H. Ellwood in the Gothic Revival style of |
| hancel was rebuilt in 1876 to designs by the | architect A.J. Style. |
| The underground hall was designed by | architect A.K. Andreev. |
| oskovskyi ("Moscow") Bridge, designed by the | architect A.V.Dobrovolsky and an engineer by G.B.Fux, |
| vival furniture, and his partner the leading | architect A.W.N. |
| two phases of the building were designed by | architect Aarno Ruusuvuori. |
| It was designed by the Belgian | architect Aaron Messiah. |
| the defeat of Baekje in the 660s, the Baekje | architect, Abiji, was commissioned to build a nine-sto |
| in 1872 or 1879 with Furness & Evans as the | architect, according to the Philadelphia Architects an |
| Nistor Grozavu is an | architect according to his profession. |
| rk by Clarence Colley, a prominent Nashville | architect active in the early decades of the 20th cent |
| rt Anthony Ten Eyck Brown (1878-1940) was an | architect active in Atlanta, Georgia and other areas. |
| d (1868 - 12 March 1950) was an English-born | architect active in New Zealand in the late 19th and e |
| 13, 1850 - August 15, 1894) was an American | architect active in Boston, Massachusetts. |
| liam Fogerty, FRIAI, FRIBA, AAI was an Irish | architect active in mid-nineteenth-century Limerick, L |
| nover - 29 April 1891, Hamburg) was a German | architect, active in Dresden, Cologne and Hamburg. |
| rd Franklin Graf (1865-1929) was an American | architect, active primarily in Knoxville, Tennessee, a |
| (1871 - 1941), was an American academic and | architect active in the late-nineteenth and early-twen |
| 4, 1912 - February 6, 1972) was an American | architect active in mid-twentieth-century New York Cit |
| in Lugano, was an Italian master builder and | architect active in Casale Monferrato. |
| Levier, Doubs - December 1967) was a French | architect active in the period between the two World W |
| rcus F. Cummings (1836-1905) was an American | architect active in the Capital District region of the |
| ch 19, 1845 - July 10, 1919) was an American | architect active in Boston, Massachusetts. |
| 1842, Paris) was a French dramatist, sailor, | architect, actor, theatre manager. |
| eaves around the entire building "EJ LENNOX | ARCHITECT AD 1898". |
| Bishop Federico Wanga commissioned the | architect Adamo d'Arogno to construct the new Lombard- |
| The residence was designed by renowned | architect Addison Mizner in 1922, in the Mediterranean |
| TheO'Keefe Gallery building was designed by | architect Addison Mizner. |
| ily residence in Montmartre, commissioned to | architect Adolf Loos (a former figure of the Vienna Se |
| 62 there was a further transformation by the | architect Adolf Lohse. |
| is a Lutheran church designed by the Swedish | architect Adolf Melander in the Gothic Revival style. |
| Nat, a young | architect, after an attendance from his mother, takes |
| Lennart Tham was chosen as | architect after no less than three competitions, the l |
| e museum was built in 1893 after a design by | architect Agi Lindegren who was inspired by medieval N |
| Client: Bouwcombinatie Weena toren | Architect: AGS Architecten |
| The tower was begun under the | architect Ahmad Ben Baso in 1184. |
| otel in El Gouna, Egypt, in association with | architect Ahmed Hamdy |
| She was designed by the Ottoman naval | architect Ahmed Pasha and built by Samuda Brothers at |
| Designed by | architect Akira Kuryu, the memorial was constructed be |
| Designed by | architect Al Hashemi, the building is residential, and |
| Architect Alajos Hauszmann himself said about the roya | |
| The brothers commissioned French | architect Alban Chambon to be the chief designer of th |
| azi party, as it was known, also called upon | architect Albert Speer to create a number of spectacle |
| as designed by the Cleveland, Ohio landscape | architect Albert Davis Taylor. |
| the church was built in 1854 and 1855 by the | architect Albert Jenkins Humbert although Prince Alber |
| ood Avenue in Oakwood was designed by Dayton | architect Albert Pretzinger in 1927. |
| The Square was named after California | architect, Albert Spaulding, who developed the eight b |
| On 15 April, Reymann met with | architect Albert Speer and General Gotthard Heinrici, |
| ely rebuilt to an Art Deco design by company | architect Albert Moore between 1928 and 1929. |
| o be apprenticed to the prominent Nottingham | architect, Albert Nelson Bromley. |
| ree Press Building is a building designed by | architect Albert Kahn and constructed in downtown Detr |
| It was designed by and the home of local | architect Albert E. Wilson (1878-1955), who was a part |
| The curator in charge of this exhibit was | Architect Alberto del Toro, with sponsorship by CARIMA |
| In 1952 he went into partnership with the | architect Alberto Rosselli (Studio Ponti-Fornaroli-Ros |
| ilding designed in 1905 by Belgian-Argentine | architect Alberto Pelsmaekers (1855 - 1923). |
| American | architect Alden Dow won the "grand prize for residenti |
| Designed by Boston | architect Alden Frink for the prominent industrialist |
| It was built in 1904 and designed by | architect Alden Marble of Fall River. |
| the six designs for homes were completed by | architect Alden B. Dow. |
| for Mercedes Castellanos de Anchorena by the | architect Alejandro Christophersen in 1905. |
| The modern tower is designed by the | architect Aleksandar Reshenov and built in 1930 based |
| y John Wickham and designed by Massachusetts | architect Alexander Parris. |
| two of which were designed by the celebrated | architect Alexander "Greek" Thomson. |
| Its two gatehouses were designed by | architect Alexander Jackson Davis. |
| Architect Alexander Kokorinov, Director and First Rect | |
| ttributed to John's brother, a local Alabama | architect, Alexander J. Bragg. |
| y then had the twin house built, designed by | architect Alexander Parris and numbered 39 and 40 Beac |
| His son united with | architect Alexander Freudenreich to found a Freudenrei |
| 5 for William King Beck and is attributed to | architect Alexander J. Bragg. |
| The church building, designed by | architect Alexander Rice Esty, was built in 1871 and a |
| bverse side carried a portrait of Glaswegian | architect Alexander "Greek" Thomson. |
| They were designed by | architect Alexander Jackson Davis and built in 1848. |
| Ellis House is a historic house, designed by | architect Alexander Rice Esty, located at 283 Pleasant |
| He hired | architect Alexander Jackson Davis to expand the estate |
| It was designed by noted | architect Alexander Jackson Davis (1803-1892) and buil |
| the destruction of the house, attributed to | architect Alexander Boswell in 1785. |
| It was designed by | architect Alexander Jackson Davis in a Gothic Revival |
| Designed by | architect Alexander Rice Esty and constructed in 1861, |
| s, which was built in 1833-40 by the Italian | architect Alexander Digbi. |
| use designed by the artists with the help of | architect Alexandru Clavel and constructed in 1912-191 |
| und floor of the Red Gate Square skyscraper ( | architect Alexey Dushkin), was completed in 1953. |
| ods and Candilis joined with the Yugoslavian | architect Alexis Josic to create in 1956 the firm Cand |
| s gutted by fire in 1831 and restored by the | architect Alfred Waterhouse in 1871 for Albert Brassey |
| 920, Louis A. Machemehl commissioned Houston | architect, Alfred C. Finn, to design the L.A. and Adel |
| Bank building was designed by the Victorian | architect Alfred Waterhouse and built 1890-93. |
| The building was designed by Texas | architect Alfred C. Finn in the Art Deco style, and op |
| anne was born in Berlin, the daughter of the | architect Alfred Breslauer (1866-1954) and Dorothea Le |
| sed in a lodge commissioned in 1868 from the | architect Alfred Derbyshire, who also designed the Pal |
| he 1936 Summer Olympics, the renowned U-Bahn | architect Alfred Grenander redesigned the building and |
| It was designed by the | architect Alfred Darbyshire. |
| and Mary Monica Waterhouse, daughter of the | architect Alfred Waterhouse. |
| Designed by | architect Alfred C. Finn, the building's original faca |
| The station was designed by the | architect Alfred Armand. |
| In the 1930's, landscape | architect Alfred Caldwell was hired by the Works Progr |
| It was designed by | architect Alfredo S.G. |
| ezid I, the mosque was designed and built by | architect Ali Neccar in 1396-1400. |
| ased on a Spanish Colonial Revival design by | architect Allen Ruoff. |
| The sudden death of the | architect allowed Alexander to exert greater influence |
| a Tower was built in 1495-1499 by an Italian | architect Aloisio da Milano (known in Russia as Aleviz |
| d was a large palace complex designed by the | architect Alonso Carbonell (c. |
| nsively renovated and extended by the famous | architect Alphonse Balat in a sober Gothic Revival sty |
| g Leopold II of Belgium, to the plans of his | architect Alphonse Balat. |
| emained, and in 1870 was restructured by the | architect Alphonse Balat in its present form. |
| In 1927 he started to collaborate with | architect Alvar Aalto, and together they became pionee |
| were designed by the world-renowned Finnish | architect Alvar Aalto. |
| The art museum was designed by the Finnish | architect Alvar Aalto and built in 1972. |
| nd administrative buildings were designed by | architect Alvin M. Strauss in Art Deco style and were |
| n was designed for the Utah Parks Company by | architect Ambrose Spence in a style that was sympathet |
| Kent Larson ( | architect), American architect, author, Director of th |
| Frank Williams ( | architect), American architect |
| The monument is designed by a Lahore based | architect Amjad Mukhtar, who is a graduate from Nation |
| was built in 1860, under the supervision of | architect Ammi B. Young. |
| gned and constructed in 1912 by Philadelphia | architect Amos W. Barnes as a dramatic school, but soo |
| as the head of the Office of the Supervising | Architect, an agency of the United States Treasury Dep |
| 2005, McCracken released The Builder and the | Architect, an album of hymns. |
| Profiled people included an | architect, an Inuit artist, a Jamaican immigrant and a |
| , began in 1908 under the supervision of the | architect Anastasios Metaxas, followed by Georgios Nom |
| t from 1894 through 1904, it was designed by | architect Anatole de Baudot, a student of Viollet-le-D |
| etical reconstruction of Bana by the Russian | architect Anatoly Kalgin, 1907 |
| d Fidler CBE (8 May 1909 - 1990) was a Welsh | architect and town planner who was chief architect for |
| However, he never became an | architect and moved back to Chicago where he earned an |
| ne 15, 1773 - July 26, 1845) was an American | architect and author whose work transitioned between F |
| n Triennale at the invitation of the Italian | architect and fellow Team X member Giancarlo de Carlo. |
| l 23, 1950) was a prominent African-American | architect, and the chief designer in the offices of ar |
| He was employed as the security | architect and senior systems engineer for Anonymizer. |
| Paul Schweikher was a notable local | architect, and the house was among his last works befo |
| cted into the Board of the company and is an | Architect and Urban Designer by profession. |
| Leon Battista Alberti (15th century | architect and artistic theorist) |
| The prominent post of Bath City | Architect and Surveyor was bestowed by the Corporation |
| ivanand, is the co-founder, Chief Technology | Architect and Managing Director of Acette Technologies |
| avoided publicity, despite his success as an | architect and businessman. |
| Father is a retired | architect and colonel in the Army reserve from Lewisto |
| - 20 November 1934) was a noted restoration | architect and archaeologist. |
| September 1947 - 3 July 2006) was a British | architect and politician. |
| It is named after Kazuo Ishii, a Japanese | architect and amateur astronomer. |
| For the | architect and furniture designer, see Charles Eastlake |
| Ezdorf (1889-March 26, 1956) was an American | architect and composer. |
| rn in Somerset, England, and practiced as an | architect and an engineer; in Russia, John Haviland me |
| The | Architect's picture is in fact a Druid - in the origin |
| Cemetery was built in 1902 to the design of | architect and professor Ludvig Fenger. |
| ely 90 years old and was designed by a noted | architect and Lodge member named Edgar Love. |
| alzac, who was born in Paris in 1752, was an | architect and architectural draughtsman. |
| Wheeler was from Reading, the daughter of an | architect and a teacher, and studied English literatur |
| as the son of Gustav and Anna Gottschalk, an | architect and builder of hotels in Chicago, IL. |
| an High Renaissance sculptor, the son of the | architect and sculptor Giuliano da Sangallo. |
| By profession, Arnold was an | architect and surveyor. |
| Designed by | architect and city planner George E. Kessler, the boul |
| n David Friedrich Otto Schulze) was a German | architect and Prussian master of works. |
| July 1913 - 9 July 2004) was a Britih peer, | architect and town-planner. |
| tcheson Timlin (11 April 1892 - 1943) was an | architect and illustrator. |
| ua (born 1952 in Madrid, Spain) is a Spanish | architect and musician, specializing in medieval Spani |
| Palace was built with the help of an Italian | Architect and is a classic fusion of Dravidian, Islami |
| rie (1798 - 20 February 1872) was a builder, | architect and Australian pioneer. |
| John Frederick Fogerty, ARIBA, was an Irish | architect and engineer active in mid-to-late-nineteent |
| 0, 1965 in Tallinn, Estonia) was an Estonian | architect and painter. |
| April 3 - Andreas Hallander, | architect and master builder (born 1755) |
| After retiring as a player, he became an | architect and designed football club Be Quick 1887's S |
| rke (2 November 1863 - 1950) was a Norwegian | architect and politician for the Conservative Party. |
| tember 1791 - 7 January 1867) was an English | architect and surveyor; he was also known as a prolifi |
| For the | architect and industrial designer, see Jack Howe (arch |
| the geometric kiosks were designed by Danish | architect and furniture designer Arne Jacobsen in 1932 |
| Lugar (1773 - June 23, 1855), was an English | architect and engineer during the Industrial Revolutio |
| David Le Roy (1724-1803), was a neoclassical | architect and archaeologist, author of the Ruins of th |
| er and his second son was Thomas Archer, the | architect and courtier. |
| Martin Day was an Irish | architect and builder active in early to mid-nineteent |
| William Strickland was the | architect and Samuel Sloan, later to be a well-known a |
| In April 1945 she married Arne Korsmo, | architect and professor at the Norwegian Institute of |
| . Hook was North Carolina's first registered | architect and at least 40 of the projects designed und |
| John Hope, known as “AJ” (1875-1960) was an | architect and president of the Manchester Society of A |
| James Fox Bryant, was a famous 19th century | architect and builder. |
| an English draughtsman, watercolour artist, | architect and teacher. |
| The Taiwanese | architect and educator Han Pao-teh was the first curat |
| Veldon Simpson was the Project | Architect and MB & H-Jim Adams (Design Architect). |
| Baillieu worked as an | architect and for a time joining the family real estat |
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