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Jørn Utzon

In 1957 Utzon won the design competition for a new opera house at Sydney with a dramatic design that brought him international fame. Construction, however, posed a variety of problems, many resulting from the innovative nature of the design, a series of sail-like shells. He resigned from the project in 1966, but construction continued until September 1973. The completed Opera House is now Sydney's best-known landmark. In 1999 Utzon agreed to return as the building's architect, overseeing an improvement project. He redesigned the reception hall - the only interior space that had been true to his plans - and it opened in 2004 as the Utzon Room. Two years later a new colonade was completed, marking the first alteration to the Opera House's exterior since 1973. In 2007 the Opera House was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

 

Utzon also noted for two housing estates, one near Helsingør (1956) and another in Fredensbourg in northen Sjælland (1957-60). Both made effective use of the surrounding terrarin. His Bagsůaerd Church (1976) in suburban Copenhagen has the appearance of clustered farm buildings. He was given numerous awards for his works, including a gold medal by the Royal Institute of British Architects in 1978. In 2003 Utzon received the prestigious Pritzker Architectural Prize.

Jørn Utzon was born April 9th, 1918, Copenhagen, Demark, and died November 29th, 2008, Copenhagen. He was a Danish architect best known for his dynamic, imaginative, but problematic design for the Sydney Opera House in Australia. Utzon studied at the Copenhagen School of Architecture (1937-24) and then spent three years in Stockholm, where he came under the influence of the Swedish architect Gunnar Asplund. He also studied in the United States, and, for a six-month period in 1946, he worked in the office of the Finnish architect and designer Alvar Aalto. Among his important early works were two houses in Denmark, his own at Hellebæk(1952( and another at Holte (1952-53).

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