Awards: 2005 Institute Honor Award for Interior Architecture
Recipient: Neil M. Denari Architects
Project: l.a. Eyeworks Showroom; Los Angeles
Client: Gai Gheradi & Barbara McReynolds; Los Angeles
Photo: Benny Chan, Fotoworks
 

     
  AIA Home ::
-
 
 
 

Become a Member
Renew Your Membership
Careers
Contract Documents
Architect Finder
Find Your Local Component
Find Your Transcript
Soloso

Awards
National Honor Awards
Honors/Awards History
Education Honor Awards
CES Award for Excellence
 
 
 
Achievement
Thomas Jefferson Awards
AIA Housing Awards
Architecture Firm Award
Whitney M. Young Jr. Award
Young Architects Award
AIA/ACSA Topaz Medallion
AIA Associates Award
Gold Medal
Honorary Membership
AIA/HUD Secretary Awards
Edward C. Kemper Award
CoSponsored
AIA/HUD Secretary Awards
AIA/ACSA Topaz Medallion
AIA/ALA Library Building Awards
Design
AIA Housing Awards
Twenty-five Year Award
Interior
Collaborative Achievement
AIA/ALA Library Building Awards
Architecture
Regional & Urban Design
Membership
Fellowship
Honorary Fellowship
Honorary Membership
 
 |  

Ragnar Ostberg, Hon. FAIA

Year Awarded: 1933
Born: January 01, 1866; Vaxholm, Sweeden
Died: 1945; Stockholm,Sweden


Projects

• 1939: Zorn Museum
• 1923: Stockholm City Hall
• 1911: Villa Elfviksudde


Biography
Ragnar Ostberg studied at both the Royal Institute of Technology and the Royal Academy of Arts in Stockholm, Sweden. After graduating, he worked with I.G. Clason.

In 1893 he traveled to Chicago, where he was impressed by Sullivan’s Transportation Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition. He traveled through Europe from 1896 to 1899.

He began his career designing private houses, but eventually also worked as a stage designer, painter, etcher, and professor at the Swedish College of Arts. In the first half of the 20th century, Ostberg became known for his designs of villas and public buildings, including the Stockholm City Hall (1923), the Swedish Patents Office Building, and a few schools.

He approached architecture as an artist and was considered a leader in the Swedish National Romantic and Swedish regional styles. The Royal Institute of British Architects awarded him a Royal Gold Medal in 1926.